Transparency Must Accompany Financial Oversight
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- On the occasion of President Obama's State of the Union address this
week, marking five years since he was sworn into office with the stated primary
objective of turning around the post-crisis domestic economy, it's worth asking:
Is America safe from another economic crisis?
Despite the regulatory efforts hustled in as a result of public panic and a
political class desperate to be seen doing something, the initial problems
remain, and the next crisis could be even worse. Among the major problems: risky
loans to those who can't repay them. Liberal advocacy groups such as Association
of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN), pushed lenders such as Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac to grant loans to borrowers who couldn't afford repayment.
The underlying problem still exists, and the new regulations are pure political
theater.
"You can't repeal the laws of supply and demand or prevent financial crisis,"
says regulatory expert Donald Lamson, a partner at the law firm Shearman &
Sterling. "Thus you'll always be tempted to save large institutions to prevent
pain on a large scale."
The U.S. government continues its bureaucratic empire-building, venturing down
the slippery slope of regulating everything from banks and insurers to, most
recently, asset managers. And who's to say that it will stop there?
So what are the actual regulations to be imposed by the U.S. Federal Reserve on
financial entities designated as systemically important and "too big to fail"?
The Financial Stability Board (FSB), the international entity based in Basel,
Switzerland, tasked by the leaders of G20 nations with establishing global
post-crisis guidelines, is still trying to figure it out. Meanwhile, each (G20)
country is supposed to diligently designate inmates for this regulatory gulag
without knowing exactly what they'll be faced with, let alone whether any
proposed regulations can pass a stress test. Just as we saw with the Kyoto
Protocol climate-change provisions (before the U.S. came to its senses), America
has been quick off the mark to voluntarily straitjacket its home team on the
global playing field.
But if there are going to be useless regulations, it's only fair that everyone
be subjected to the same uselessness -- and for the public to be able to see
this riveting exercise in sadism and masochism. Sadly, that's not happening. At
least the Federal Reserve's 2008 Troubled Asset Relief Program bailout process
was transparently debated in Congress. That process has now been moved into the
shadows.
A U.S. Treasury agency called the Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC),
created by the Dodd-Frank Act, is tasked with designating "too big to fail"
entities -- choosing who'll be subjected to inspections by government
bureaucrats trying to justify their existence, plus new and still-undefined
requirements related to capital, investments and liquidity. This all ensures
that when the next crisis happens, the process will be so ineffectively
Byzantine and unwieldy that no politician will want to take a lead role in
untangling the mess.
The FSOC debates over these designations have become increasingly secretive,
with the public portion of their meetings growing shorter, and any dissenting
views reduced from multiple pages of argumentation in some cases to a mere few
lines -- even when those dissenting views belong to the individuals with the
most expertise in the subject under debate.
Chairing the FSOC subcommittee responsible for selecting the entities to undergo
this designation process is 33-year-old Treasury hotshot Amias Gerety, the
FSOC's deputy assistant secretary. Along with Daniel Tarullo, a committee chair
at the Financial Stability Board and the Federal Reserve's informally designated
lead governor for bank regulatory purposes, Gerety emerged from Obama's favorite
think tank and talent pool: the George Soros-funded Center for American
Progress.
Seemingly aware of the transparency problem, Gerety testified in writing last
year to a congressional subcommittee that the FSOC had improved its website and
access to council documents, and that it actively supports public collaboration.
Then how about telling folks exactly how they might go about collaborating? And
what about making the debates more transparent, too? What the public is keen to
know is whether you folks are spitballing it -- as everyone else in this Kabuki
theater production seems to be doing. In fact, this whole process really belongs
in Congress among accountable elected representatives.
This month, for example, Bloomberg reported that FSOC regulators were getting
around to considering Obama's favorite billionaire Warren Buffett's Berkshire
Hathaway for the Federal Reserve regulatory gulag, given that it obviously meets
the primary (and perhaps only truly discernible) designation factor in rulings
thus far: asset size. Naturally, FSOC officially refused to discuss it.
One would think that as servants of the people, they'd feel less entitled to
opacity while playing capitalist gods in selecting future winners and losers in
our so-called free market.
COPYRIGHT 2014 RACHEL MARSDEN