Posted by Kenneth Anderson:
The Text of President Obama's Wall Street Speech
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_09_13-2009_09_19.shtml#1252961171


   I'm afraid I don't have time to comment on it at the moment, but in
   case you are interested in reading the as-released [1]text of
   President Obama's September 15, 2009 speech on Wall Street, on
   financial regulation reform, it is here at the New York Times.

   Overall, and despite the large amount of stuff sent by the
   administration to Congress since the release of the Treasury White
   Paper, I am disappointed that financial regulation reform is not
   really moving very far, very fast, and is subject to three enormous
   weakeners - the speed with which fear that gripped everyone a year ago
   at this time recedes into a mere memory mostly of catastrophes avoided
   and hence discounted, the lobbying force of the financial services
   industry when it deals with Congress, and the fact that long term
   financial services reform - while always, of political necessity, on a
   backseat from dealing with the recession - is actually farther down
   the list of the Obama administration's domestic policy issues, after
   health care reform, and issues related to the recession and stimulus.

   Everyone seems agreed, so far as I can tell, that not only will Fannie
   and Freddie not be addressed until next year, other fundamental reform
   issues will not be dealt with by Congress, either. And when they
   finally do, the sense, not so much of urgency, but instead that
   fundamental changes are needed, has largely evaporated. Yet the
   incentives remain as perverse as they were before; the question is
   whether there is a supply of funds and a market of sufficient opacity,
   short-termism, and too-big-to-fail-icity that it can do what the
   mortgage markets did mid-decade. Greed is rapidly replacing - has
   already replaced - fear in all the wrong places. Those places are
   principally, of course (a) Wall Street, for whom externalized risk and
   moral hazard are back, without fundamental changes in the regulatory
   or compensation rules and with an ever-firmer belief in the USG-put,
   and (b) Congress, making its rent-seeking calculations, meaning, how
   much its members will be able to benefit from making available the
   USG-put.

References

   1. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/15/business/15obamatext.html?_r=1

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