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Garrett Calls “Too-Big-To-Fail” a virus in our banking system and says Dodd-Frank increased the likelihood that taxpayers will be on the hook for additional Wall Street bailouts

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January 16,2016

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, In November  Rep. Scott Garrett (NJ-05), Chairman of the Financial Services Subcommittee on Capital Markets and Government-Sponsored Enterprises, questioned Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen about the Fed’s use of cost/benefit analyses on new regulations. Chair Yellen testified before the House Financial Services Committee today and admitted to Rep. Garrett that the Fed has no plans to conduct an economic analysis that would determine the cumulative impact that hundreds of new rules prescribed by Dodd-Frank and the Basel Committee will have on the economy.

Garrett spoke earlier last year saying “ the Dodd-Frank Act was signed into law amidst promises that the legislation would protect American consumers, make our economy more competitive, and end ‘too big to fail.’ Instead, Dodd-Frank has stifled economic growth, made it more difficult for Main Street businesses to obtain credit, and increased the likelihood that taxpayers will be on the hook for additional Wall Street bailouts. Most importantly, this law has and has made it harder for Americans to find a job, buy a home, and save money for their family’s future.

“Despite creating new bureaucracies that have imposed thousands of pages of rigid, invasive, and unworkable regulations, Dodd-Frank did nothing to reform the mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, whose actions caused the 2008 financial crisis. Now more than ever we need solutions that expand economic freedom and opportunities for hard-working American taxpayers. I look forward to working with my colleagues in order to protect our economy from the harsh reality of Dodd-Frank.”

“I believe we have a virus in our banking system that is stifling competition and innovation. It protects incompetent management and insulates antiquated business models from market discipline. It incentivizes the largest banks to grow even larger and makes these mega-banks captive to government influence. This “Too-Big-To-Fail” virus is now poised to spread beyond banks to other types of financial firms. Not surprising, it is the government that is preparing to label other financial firms “Too-Big-To-Fail” by designating them as systemically important and spreading these market distortions.

 

The Spectacular Too Big Failure of Dodd-Frank

Quick-to-fix regulation often creates unintended consequences
Dodd-Frank ultimately destroyed the community bank
Consumers lost choice and completion, although farmers were hurt most

By Edward Morrissey

February 12, 2015

Not much unites the activist Left and activist Right, and not much ever has. After the near-collapse of the fiscal sector in 2008, though, populist movements on both sides found momentum in opposition to government bailouts of private-sector firms, especially in the financial industry.

“Too big to fail” became a mantra used to leverage massive taxpayer bailouts of financial institutions. Those bailouts enraged conservatives who believed that government had largely created the “too big to fail” players that needed rescuing from bad government policy. At the same time, progressives angrily denounced the parachutes provided to Wall Street fat cats while ordinary Americans suffered through a period of tight lending and a poor economy — especially in the labor markets.

By the time 2010 rolled around, the two sides could agree on one thing: changes were necessary to unwind “too big to fail.” Conservatives wanted to push government out of lending and finance through tax and regulatory reforms that would end rent-seeking behaviors that perpetuated it. Progressives wanted more regulation and government intervention to force the industry to behave better.

Since Democrats controlled Congress and the White House in the spring and summer of 2010, they chose the progressive policy. Congress passed and President Barack Obama signed the Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act in July of that year – not long after passing the progressive Affordable Care Act that created massive government intervention in the health-insurance industry.

For the past eighteen months, the news media has focused on the failures and incompetence of the Obama administration in the ACA’s rollout and infrastructure. The impact of Dodd-Frank has largely been ignored, until now. According to a new study by the Harvard Kennedy School of Business, the attempt to end Too Big to Fail backfired – in a big way.

One problem that led to TBTF was industry consolidation, which had been steadily reducing the number of smaller community banks that made lending much more accessible to small business owners, farmers, and middle and working-class families. Over the past twenty years, the share of US lending handled by community banks has fallen by half, from 41 percent to 22 percent, while the share handled by large banks more than doubled from 17 percent to 41 percent.

https://www.thefiscaltimes.com/Columns/2015/02/12/Spectacular-Way-Too-Big-Failure-Dodd-Frank

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Paramus’ Hudson City merger deadline put back 4 months

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Paramus’ Hudson City merger deadline put back 4 months

DECEMBER 10, 2014    LAST UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014, 1:21 AM
BY HUGH R. MORLEY
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

* M&T extends $3.7 billion Hudson City deal to April 30 as Fed reviews would-be buyer’s money-laundering controls

The deadline for the $3.7 billion merger between Hudson City Bancorp Inc. of Paramus, New Jersey’s largest bank, and Buffalo-based M&T Bank Corp. has been held up for a third time, the lenders said Tuesday, extending the longest delay for any bank tie-up since the financial crisis six years ago.

With a Dec. 31 deadline looming, the banks said the merger, first announced in August 2012, would have to be completed by April 30, the companies said in a release. When the deal was first announced, it was the biggest takeover of a U.S. bank in 2012, according to Bloomberg News data.

The deadline extension follows similar announcements in August 2013 and January of this year. Bank mergers have generally taken longer to complete since the financial crisis, as regulators have placed more scrutiny and requirements on prospective partners. However, experts said the M&T-Hudson City deal is taking far longer than normal, even by current standards, and perhaps longer than any bank merger in memory.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/business/merger-tied-up-3rd-time-1.1149488

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Martin Armstrong Warns Civil Unrest Is Rising Everywhere: “This Won’t End Pretty”

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Martin Armstrong Warns Civil Unrest Is Rising Everywhere: “This Won’t End Pretty”

Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2014 16:40 -0400

The greatest problem we have is misinformation. People simply do not comprehend why and how the economic policies of the post-war era are imploding. This whole agenda of socialism has sold a Utopian idea that the State is there for the people yet it is run by lawyers following their own self-interest. The pensions created for those in government drive the cost of government up exponentially with time. The political forces blame the rich and this merely creates a class warfare with no resolution for the future. Even confiscating all the wealth of the so-called rich will not sustain the system. Consequently, we just have to crash and burn and start all over again.

The Guardian reported that some 50,000 people marched in London to protest against austerity. They cried: “Who is really responsible for the mess this country is in? Is it the Polish fruit pickers or the Nigerian nurses? Or is it the bankers who plunged it into economic disaster – or the tax avoiders? It is selective anger.”

The exploitation by the bankers has been really a disaster. They have been their own worst enemy and in the end, they have become the symbol that inspires class warfare if not revolution. They are not the representatives of those who produce jobs. They are merely those who wanted to trade with other people’s money for free. When they win, it is their’s, but any losses are passed to the taxpayers. Bankers should be bankers – not hedge fund managers who keep 100% of the profits using other people’s savings.

https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-06-28/martin-armstrong-warns-civil-unrest-rising-everywhere-wont-end-pretty