http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/34537-bernie-sanders-hillary-clinton-and-wall-street

Bernie Sanders, Hillary Clinton and Wall Street
Monday, 25 January 2016 00:00
By Dean Baker, Truthout | Op-Ed

As the Democratic presidential primary heats up, one of the major issues
has been which candidate has the better approach towards regulating Wall
Street. While financial regulation can get into many complex areas, there
are some basic points that people should know.

First, financial regulation always leaves enormous room for discretion.
Some regulatory agencies, like the Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, are notoriously lax, not because they lack the authority to
control the banks and other financial institutions, but because their
leadership is content to let the banks do what they want.

Sometimes an agency's character changes with its leader. The Commodity
Futures Trading Commission became a serious regulatory agency under Gary
Gensler, who headed it in the first six years of the Obama administration.
(Gensler is now the chief financial officer of Secretary Clinton's
campaign.)

This is a crucial point, since the effectiveness of any regulation will
always depend on the political will to enforce it. Even with the
deregulatory steps of the 1990s, the Federal Reserve Board still had all
the power it needed to rein in the housing bubble. The Fed had authority to
regulate mortgage issuance. It chose to ignore this authority during the
run-up of the bubble.

The Fed also had enormous ability to influence financial markets through
its public statements and research. It could have warned of the housing
bubble and used its extensive research department to document the case, as
the current chair Janet Yellen did two summers ago
<http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/17/upshot/should-janet-yellen-be-giving-us-stock-picks.html>
in
reference to bubbles in several sectors. Instead, Alan Greenspan encouraged
people
<http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/money/economy/fed/2004-02-23-greenspan-debt_x.htm>
to buy adjustable rate mortgages at the peak of the subprime frenzy.

This point about discretion is important, because whatever words we have on
paper, we have to ask whether the people responsible for enforcement will
actually carry through. Do we think that Hillary Clinton or Bernie Sanders
will appoint people who will break up large banks that pose a risk to the
economy? Do we think that they will throw their top executives in jail if
they break the law?

The second point is that we should not get caught up fighting the last war.
Much of the discussion of regulatory reform programs centers on whether
they would have stopped the housing bubble and prevented the resulting
financial crisis. While that is an interesting question to ask, this cannot
be sole measure of effective regulation.

One of the few areas where I have absolute certainty is that the next
crisis, whenever it occurs, will not look like the last crisis. We have to
ask whether the regulatory structure that we have in place is doing an
effective job ensuring that the financial sector is serving the rest of the
economy, not just whether it would have prevented the 2008 meltdown.

In this respect, it is difficult to be very positive about the direction we
are currently going. The Dodd-Frank reforms were useful in many areas, most
importantly in creating the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and
ensuring that the bulk of derivative trades now occur on exchanges or
through clearinghouses, but it is difficult to be very positive about the
general direction of the financial industry.

The big banks are bigger than ever. As a result of mergers coming in the
crisis, the six biggest banks now have more than $10 trillion in assets, an
amount equal to 60 percent of GDP. If people expected Dodd-Frank to end the
problem of too big to fail, they have reason to be disappointed. It is
difficult to believe that the government would allow JP Morgan or Goldman
Sachs to go under today, just as they did not allow them to go bankrupt in
the crisis.

Some analysts have pointed to a study
<http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-14-621> by the Government Accountability
Office showing that the borrowing cost discount enjoyed by too-big-to-fail
banks has largely disappeared in recent years. This same study also shows
these banks enjoyed almost no too-big-to-fail discount in 2006. Since we
clearly had a de facto too-big-to-fail policy in place in 2006, the results
from this study cannot be taken as strong evidence for the end of too big
to fail.

We are also losing the battle to downsize the industry. There has been
research in recent years from both the Bank of International Settlements
<http://www.bis.org/publ/work381.pdf> and International Monetary Fund
<https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/sdn/2015/sdn1508.pdf> showing that a
large financial sector is a drag on growth. In spite of the crisis and the
effects of Dodd-Frank, the financial sector continues to grow as a share of
the economy. It was under 17.0 percent of national income in 2007, last
year it was almost 18.0 percent
<http://www.bea.gov/iTable/iTable.cfm?ReqID=9&step=1#reqid=9&step=3&isuri=1&904=2006&903=181&906=a&905=2015&910=x&911=0>.
In this respect, it is worth noting that Sanders' proposal for a financial
transactions tax would be a big step towards downsizing the industry by
eliminating tens of billions of dollars spent on short-term trading.

Finally, there is the question of whether people who break the law in the
financial industry have reason to fear the consequences. In the years since
Dodd-Frank the financial sector has not stopped its shenanigans. There was
the famous London Whale
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012_JPMorgan_Chase_trading_loss> incident
in which billions of dollars of trading losses at Morgan Stanley were
concealed from regulators.

There was also the case of MF Global
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MF_Global>, a commodity trading company,
which apparently used money in its clients' accounts to cover its own
trading losses. MF Global was headed by Jon Corzine, a former Democratic
governor and senator from New Jersey. No one went to jail, no one was
prosecuted.

And, earlier this month Goldman Sachs announced a settlement
<http://abcnews.go.com/Business/wireStory/goldman-sachs-pay-billion-mortgage-settlement-36298605>in
which it paid $5 billion related to its mortgage practices during the
bubble years. No one went to jail, there were no prosecutions. There was
not even an admission of guilt.

In assessing the regulatory agendas of the presidential candidates, we have
to ask, do we think they would end too-big-to-fail banks? Do we think they
would downsize the industry? And finally, will Wall Street criminals have
to worry about going to jail? Those are the big questions facing primary
voters.
===

Robert Naiman
Policy Director
Just Foreign Policy
www.justforeignpolicy.org
[email protected]
(202) 448-2898 x1
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