7/16/2010 10:47:45 AM
I'll say it so someone else doesn't have to: "...but lack of regulation is what got us into this mess, therefore all new regulations and laws are good."Is anyone surprised that a full Federal Reserve audit didn't make into the final bill? When I talk about a banking cartel in this country, I'm not exaggerating. It really exists. The banks borrow money for virtually free from the Fed, then make money on it by either loaning it out or buying treasuries. It really is a scam, and the political establishment is working hard to make sure no one pays attention to it.
7/16/2010 11:26:39 AM
No, stupid people got us into this mess. Its not the government's job to protect us from every little thing. The country would be a much better place if the government didn't have a knee jerk reaction every time we go through an economic cycle.
7/16/2010 9:36:16 PM
The government is largely responsible for the boom bust cycle.I'd like to hear some people defend this bill. It was voted for on purely partisan lines. The Federal Reserve is given more power with this. Banks that had nothing to do with subprime are now going to have to spend millions to comply with the new regulations. Small banks probably will have a hard time doing it. The too big to fails shouldn't have a problem hiring some new people on the taxpayer's dime, though.
7/17/2010 10:51:50 AM
^ i haven’t read much about this bill yet, but what costly regulations are you referring to?
7/17/2010 11:02:58 AM
^ are you serious?
7/17/2010 3:15:20 PM
^Death to America
7/17/2010 3:35:59 PM
“I would say that nothing in this bill would have prevented the previous crisis — the one we are working our way through right now,” said William Isaac, former chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. "And it clearly won't prevent the next crisis."But it will take years before the impact of the law is known. That’s because most of the specific regulations have yet to be written.“The devil is in the details: There are a lot of unanswered question that were thrown to regulators," said Jay Brown, a professor of corporate and securities law at the University of Denver. “The reason it was thrown to regulators is because there are no answers. So for example: What’s too big to fail? Nobody knows the answer to that.” Under the new law, banks and other financial institutions will be overseen by a council of regulators. That group will be charged with identifying the kinds of “systemic” risks that spun out of control in the collapse of Bear Stearns and Lehman Bros. in the financial panic of September 2008. But there’s little to be gained by entrusting that task to the same regulators who failed to spot the causes of the panic the first time, said Isaac, the former FDIC head. “If a bank went to the regulators and said, ‘We’ve got a good idea: we’re going to put our lending officers in charge of risk management,’ that bank would be put out of its misery immediately,” said Isaac. “That’s what the government just did. It put the regulators in charge of assessing their own performance. It’s a very bad system.” The new law also sets up different rules for big banks—those with more than $10 billion in assets—and the rest of the industry. That means a handful of banks will continue to enjoy “too big to fail” status—complete with an implicit government guarantee that lowers their borrowing costs and gives then a competitive edge, according to Hurley. “It enshrines for the foreseeable future that there are two parts of the financial system,” he said. “There are the six largest banks, which account for about 60 percent of the financial system, and then there is everybody else, from regional banks down to credit unions. The top six get a subsidy in the form of lower borrowing costs. And everybody else pays for it.”http://reason.com/blog/2010/07/16/financial-reform-will-definite
7/17/2010 6:19:30 PM
Nothing in this bill will prevent a recession. It is just a feeding frenzy for lobbyists, lawyers and politicians.Just like the $800 billion gov't pork bill was sold as a "stimulus" package, this massive bone thrown to lawyers and unions is being sold as "Economic Reform"
7/18/2010 12:29:04 AM
I quit reading here:
7/18/2010 12:21:09 PM
the heritage.org should have been more concerning.christian science monitor is a fairly decent source often.
7/18/2010 12:26:35 PM
7/18/2010 12:40:30 PM
wheres the part of the bill where they say what money is going to unions and lawyers?
7/18/2010 3:15:39 PM
7/18/2010 6:33:38 PM
if ignorance was bliss, you'd be having an orgasm right nowseriously, even NPR said effectively what that blog post was saying: that no regulations have actually been written yet. I wish I could pass a bill that says "we'll make the rules up later, k? oh, and they'll be binding." seriously, that is disturbing beyond belief]
7/18/2010 7:41:43 PM
7/22/2010 10:32:04 PM
^ Seems like a good thing.
7/22/2010 10:34:00 PM
yeah. I mean, when we have trouble with getting lending going again so businesses can grow, we should definitely make it so that banks don't want to lend!
7/22/2010 11:02:17 PM
^ So what are you saying, the rating agencies are too big to fail?
7/22/2010 11:48:17 PM
moron, I don't know who you think the bailed out party is. Ford motor company is, as far as I know, a good investment. There are people lining up to lend money to Ford. If you are hating on the ratings agencies, you are right to do so, they are a de-facto government run industry that fucked up royally. The market solution would have been to discredit them and for them to go away, leaving investors to choose safe bets on their own or with the help of more trusted institutions. Now, you agree the rating agencies are bunk, so why are you defending a law requiring their approval before entities, far more credible than they, are allowed to borrow? The planners have fucked up again. The correct solution was to de-regulate the rating business. Instead, the government tried to beef them up into government run creditor insurance agencies. Even if the parties had figured out how to price such a service, it would have been even more prone to blowing up than the previous government run rating system.
7/23/2010 12:30:41 AM
^ It seems to me like most things, the government only did this half assed.1) Requiring that rating companies be liable for their ratings = Good (especially so if these are mandated by the government, as that instills a further degree of trust)2) Requiring that lenders have to provide documentation from ratings companies = Bad.3) No liability for the government for requiring documentation from a bad ratings company = BadThe ideal way to fix this would be to fix issue 2 as issue 3 is just a path laden with pitfalls.
7/23/2010 1:04:21 PM
7/27/2010 6:51:11 PM
^It shows Obama's mind-set that this finance bill mainly went after the private sector...ignoring the two main culprits Fannie and Freddie. After all, it was their guarantees- combined with the democrats' edict to have everyone own a home- that got us into this recession.
7/28/2010 10:38:55 AM
It was lack of regulation and free market capitalism, damn it. The Fed, government backed loans, and Congress are all completely blameless. The only way to prevent another crisis is to punish the firms that had nothing to do with causing it, while also padding the pockets of the power elite. Apparently you're not familiar with how the new regime operates.
7/28/2010 11:17:15 AM
7/28/2010 12:43:44 PM
both parties get value out of putting people in homes because its a short term gain (votes) and they're betting someone else will be caught holding the bag when it goes ugly. This shit started decades ago and its just now getting public attention. credit should not be available at all to people who cant afford it.
7/28/2010 1:16:18 PM
7/28/2010 4:24:28 PM
7/28/2010 5:10:58 PM
7/28/2010 5:27:19 PM
7/29/2010 11:08:16 AM
Prices adjust to ensure a correct amount of consumption. Prices also adjust to ensure a correct amount of investment. This is only not true for one resource because no amount of price adjustment can ever produce any more, and that is U.S. dollars, because their scarcity is purely artificial.
7/29/2010 11:44:08 AM
7/29/2010 12:48:46 PM
7/30/2010 11:26:44 PM