With the passage of historic financial reform legislation, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is being given the authority to reshape bank regulations, oversee financial markets and create a consumer protection agency. Few Treasury secretaries will wield this much influence once President Obama signs the new financial overhaul legislation passed by Congress.
Geithner’s fingerprints are all over the effort to expand financial regulation. The bill is extremely close to the initial draft he released last summer but also names him — as long as he remains Treasury secretary — as the head of a council of senior regulators. The legislation also puts him at the head of the new consumer bureau until the Senate confirms a permanent director. In other words, Geithner will mold the regulator over the next several months. It also will be his responsibility to work out several issues left unresolved by the bill — for instance, which financial derivatives will be subject to the strict new trading rules and which risky activities big banks will have to spin off.
The legislation “will help restore the great strength of the American financial system, which — at its best — develops innovative ways to provide credit and capital, not just for our great global companies, but for the individual with an idea and a plan,” according to Geithner. Efforts to win passage of the financial regulatory bill were driven primarily by the Treasury, proof that Geithner has significant autonomy within the administration.
Sen. Christopher J. Dodd (D-CT), who moved the financial overhaul package through the Senate, said it wasn’t his preference to put the Treasury secretary in charge of the new council. He would prefer that a member of the Federal Reserve board fill that role. At the same time, he said, having a member of the president’s Cabinet in charge could make the council “more politically responsive. It gives you some accountability,” Dodd said.
With the passage of historic financial reform legislation, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is being given the authority to reshape bank regulations, oversee financial markets and create a consumer protection agency.
Senator Christopher Dodd (D-CT) is enjoying a big victory in his last days in the Senate following passage of broad financial reform legislation designed to rein in the excesses that caused the financial meltdown. First, the Senate and House versions of the bill must undergo reconciliation. Under the new law, for example, homebuyers will have to provide proof of income when applying for a mortgage. Additionally, a new consumer protection apparatus will monitor lenders who offer subprime loans and then raise interest rates to sky-high levels.
The United States still faces “significant economic challenges”, with unemployment at “stubbornly” high levels and businesses that are reluctant to spend as government deficits rise. This is the opinion of Federal Reserve Governor Kevin Warsh,
Simon Johnson, a professor at M.I.T.’s Sloan School of Management and former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund, raises the question of “As we move closer to a Senate - and presumably national - debate on financial reform, the central technical and political question is:
Senator Christopher Dodd (D-CT), chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, introduced revised legislation to regulate the nation’s financial system.