Center for Economic and Policy Research: Statement on President
Obama's Financial Crisis Responsibility Fee

Washington, D.C.- Center for Economic and Policy Research Co- Director
Dean Baker released the following statement on the Obama
administration's proposal to impose a fee on the financial
institutions that received TARP funds.

Today, the White House announced a proposal to impose a Financial
Crisis Responsibility Fee (FCRF) on the Wall Street firms that have
benefited most from the TARP program. Now that executives of the too
big to fail banks are again enjoying huge bonuses while the rest of
the nation suffers through double-digit unemployment, the Obama
administration is taking action against the banks whose reckless
actions wreaked havoc on the U.S. economy. It is encouraging that the
President is working to recoup taxpayer money far earlier than the
2013 deadline mandated in the TARP legislation.

While this proposal represents a step forward in getting the big banks
to repay the American taxpayers, stronger action will be required to
protect the economy from future abuses and recoup more of the public
funds used to rescue a bloated financial sector.

In its proposed form, the FCRF would only be in place long enough to
recoup the money lost through TARP. This means that the FCRF will not
recoup money lost by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Many of the losses
incurred by these government sponsored enterprises (GSE)s (which could
exceed $400 billion) likely came on mortgages purchased from banks
after they were taken into conservatorship in September of 2008.

This means that Fannie and Freddie were losing money effectively doing
exactly what the TARP program was originally intended for, buying up
bad mortgages from banks. It would be reasonable to insist that the
banks cover these losses as well.

The FCRF will also do little, if anything, to shrink the bloat in the
financial sector. The financial sector has quadruped as a share of
private sector GDP in the last three decades. In contrast to the FCRF,
a financial speculation tax (FST), along the lines recently introduced
by representative Peter DeFazio in the House and Tom Harkin in the
Senate, would go far towards reducing the volume of transactions that
serve little or no productive purpose. Such a tax could also raise
more than $100 billion annually, which would go far towards repairing
the damage caused by this downturn.

The Obama administration's proposal is a positive step toward holding
the banks accountable for the damage that they have caused. However,
it should not prevent the stronger actions needed to fully cover the
cost of the damage and to restore efficiency to the financial sector.
-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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