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Written by Linda Chavez
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Thursday, 18 June 2009 |
One of
the great dangers in dealing with a crisis is making major, long-term decisions based on the immediate circumstances
unique to the problem you're trying to fix. In the case of the current financial crisis the conventional wisdom is
that it is the result of poor oversight and loose regulation, so the Obama administration's answer is to layer on
more regulations and greatly expand the role of the Federal Reserve. But the cure may be worse than the disease.
It's not often I agree with Democratic Senator Chris Dodd, but he
hit the nail on the head when he suggested the Obama plan to give vast new regulatory responsibility to the Fed
"is like a parent giving his son a bigger, faster car right after he crashed the family station wagon."
The president's plan would turn an agency whose historic role has
been to set monetary policy into a new superagency whose job it would be to oversee any institution that has the
potential to adversely affect the overall economy, including large insurance companies, hedge funds and investment
banks. But adding these new areas of regulatory oversight not only concentrates enormous power over the economy in a
single body but would divert attention from the important monetary function the Fed now plays: namely, control of
the nation's money supply.
The administration's plan is the brainchild primarily of two men:
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and the director of the National Economic Council Larry Summers. Geithner's
previous job was as head of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, so it's not surprising he thinks the Fed deserves
even more power. On the other hand Summers, who was Bill Clinton's Treasury Secretary, may want to make up for past
sins. He
has been the beneficiary of largesse from some of the very Wall Street firms at the heart of the current financial
mess. According to disclosure forms he filed when he joined the administration, as reported in Salon magazine,
Summers earned more than $2.7 million in speaking fees in 2008 alone from Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch, Lehman
Brothers, Citigroup, and other troubled firms.
If the administration gets its way, the Fed will have greatly
expanded authority to decide which institutions it would regulate. This week, even the plan's authors seemed unsure
which institutions would come under greater scrutiny and oversight, with Geithner claiming the plan wouldn't
regulate hedge funds and Summers saying it was too early to tell. But the administration's "blueprint" for
reform lays out broad criteria that include an institution's size, leverage, and reliance on short-term funding; its
role as a source of liquidity for the financial system; the impact a potential collapse might have on the financial
system; and whether the institution was a source of credit to homeowners, businesses, and governments.
The definitions provided by the administration are so broad they
could include not just institutions like insurance giant American International Group, the investment firm Goldman
Sachs, and other firms whose near collapse last year precipitated the financial crisis but virtually any large
institution whose business model includes providing financing to just about anyone.
The public is growing increasingly skeptical, however, whether the
Obama administration's far-reaching intrusion into the private sector is a good idea. The latest Wall Street Journal
poll shows nearly 70 percent of Americans have reservations about the government's recent interventions in the
economy, and President Obama's approval ratings have fallen. Overall, he's slipped from a 61 percent approval rating
in April to a 56 percent rating now, and a bare majority of Americans, 51 percent, now approve of his handling of
the economy.
Poll numbers like these may explain why the president's plan has
already drawn fire from Democrats like Dodd as well as Republicans. Congress may yet put the brakes on the Obama
plan. If not, the Federal Reserve's growing tentacles could end up strangling the U.S. economy in the name of
protecting it.
Linda Chavez is the author of "An Unlikely Conservative: The
Transformation of an Ex-Liberal." To find out more about Linda Chavez, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at
www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
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