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Smith Faculty
Opinion Article
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March 31,
2008
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor of
International Business
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Paulson Regulatory Reform Plan Falls Short
The regulatory framework proposed by
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson will
not address fundamental problems in the
banking sector that contributed
significantly to the recession and that
must be fixed to rescue the U.S. economy
from recession and avoid future crises.
The banks and securities companies,
essentially, created overly complex and
risky securities when bundling subprime
mortgages and other loans into bonds.
The banks became engaged in bogus, off
books operations and credit default
swaps that proved less than worthy.
Ultimately, the value of these bonds
collapsed, as investors could not
adequately evaluate those bonds and
discount for their risks.
Now fixed income investors no longer
trust the credibility of the banks and
securities companies, and these firms
can no longer bundle mortgages, consumer
loans and business loans into bonds,
giving rise to the current credit
shortage.
Even with a lower fed funds rate and
beefed up access to the discount window,
banks lack the credibility to raise
funds in the fixed income market to make
loans adequate to power the economy out
of recession.
The regulatory reform and
reorganization proposed by Secretary
Paulson would enhance the Federal
Reserve's access to information about
investment bank and securities companies
activities, and subject many to stricter
prudential financial standards; however,
it does little to constrain the banks
and securities from the kinds of abuses
that gave rise to the current crisis.
Nor does his plan provide adequate
safeguard to avoid future credit crises
and recessions from a recurrence of
securitization abuses.
Further, Paulson's plan does not
address the problem of the bond rating
agencies. Rating services are paid by
the banks and securities companies to
rate the bonds created by those
companies. This has proven a flawed
model that Paulson seems unwilling to
address.
Peter Morici is a professor at the
University of Maryland School of
Business and former Chief Economist at
the U.S. International Trade Commission. ►More Faculty
Opinion Articles |