Having Consumer Protection Under Treasury “A Sick Joke” 3/1

Institute for Public Accuracy
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(202) 347-0020 * http://www.accuracy.org * ipa@accuracy.org
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MarketWatch reports today: "Senate Banking Committee Chairman
Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., has dropped plans for a separate, stand-alone
agency to protect consumers against credit-card and mortgage fraud in a
bid to restart stalled financial reform legislation."

WILLIAM K. BLACK
     Black is associate professor of economics and law at the University
of Missouri, Kansas City. He was a senior regulator during the savings
and loan scandal and blew the whistle on prominent politicians,
including House Speaker Wright and the five U.S. senators who became
famous as the "Keating Five." He was the lead staffer on the successful
reregulation of the S&L industry and directed the investigations that
led to convictions in many of the worst S&L frauds.

     He said today: "The single most positive element of the Senate
reform legislation was the creation of an independent regulatory agency
dedicated to consumer protection against financial abuses. The scope of
those financial abuses is staggering. What the FBI rightly warned about
in September 2004: an 'epidemic' of mortgage fraud that they predicted
would cause a financial 'crisis' caused the housing bubble to
hyper-inflate and caused the greatest loss of working class wealth in
our history. The crisis also shows that protecting consumers
simultaneously protects honest lenders. A 'Gresham's dynamic' caused
this crisis -- lenders that engaged in accounting 'control fraud' gained
an advantage over honest lenders because accounting fraud is a 'sure
thing' that produces record (fictional) profits that maximize executive
bonuses. George Akerlof and Paul Romer captured this dynamic in the
title of their 1993 article: 'Looting: Bankruptcy for Profit.' Lenders
optimize accounting fraud by lending to the least financially
sophisticated borrowers on predatory terms. Despite FBI warnings and
ample warnings to the Federal Reserve in hearings (mandated by Congress
-- the Fed would not have even held the hearings absent that compulsion)
about endemic lender fraud and predation, the Fed refused to use its
authority under HOEPA to prevent the accounting fraud and predation.
Worse, Treasury and the Fed have overwhelmingly perverse institutional
incentives to represent the interest of the worst financial executives
-- the looters -- against the interests of borrowers.

     "The proposal to amend the Senate bill to place consumer protection
in Treasury, rather than an independent regulatory agency with
institutional incentives to protect borrowers, is a sick joke. This is
not even a case of putting a fox in charge of the proverbial chicken
coop -- the foxes have already slaughtered the chickens. The only reason
we were successful in reregulating the S&L industry during the Reagan
administration was because the Federal Home Loan Bank Board was an
independent regulatory agency. The administration hated our successful
reregulation, which kept the debacle from developing into a Great
Recession, and would have blocked it had we not been an independent
regulatory agency. Its successor administration's, the first President
Bush's, first significant legislative response to the S&L debacle (the
1989 FIRREA legislation) ended the Bank Board's independent regulatory
status and made its successor (OTS [Office of Thrift Supervision]) a
bureau within Treasury. OTS, of course, under the second President
Bush's appointees, joined its sister bureau (OCC [Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency]) in becoming an anti-regulatory disgrace.
The OTS went so far as to encourage a failed S&L to file false financial
statements to disguise its failure. OCC spent all of its energies
successfully preempting efforts by state attorneys general to protect
borrowers from predatory lenders. We are now supposed to believe that
the answer to the crisis is to create another Treasury bureau? To be
successful, that bureau's function would have to be negating every
policy of the OCC and the OTS. That, obviously, is not going to happen.
Treasury will continue to represent the financial industry at the direct
expense of our nation. [James] Galbraith ('The Predator State') and
[Thomas] Frank ('The Wrecking Crew') explain how and why this happens.

     "Independence does not guarantee effective regulation (witness the
Fed and the SEC), but it is a sine qua non for effective regulation.
Four things make for effective regulation -- and independence increases
the chances of each element occurring. The first is leadership. This is
where even independent agencies are deeply vulnerable because the
president appoints their leaders. Bush, for example, appointed Harvey
Pitt, the most notorious anti-regulator, as Chairman of the SEC.
However, leaders can change. Bank Board Chairman Gray is an example of
this process. He was a patron of deregulation but saw that it was
optimizing the S&L environment for accounting fraud.

     "The second requisite is power. The agency needs effective
regulatory, examination, data, and enforcement authority. An independent
agency is less subject to OMB's and OPM's anti-regulatory efforts that
focus on these elements.

     "The third necessity is to create institutional incentives that
increase the odds that the agency will seek to fulfill its regulatory
mission rather than being 'captured' by the industry it is supposed to
regulate. The Fed, of course, is set up in exactly the wrong manner due
to the regional banks. The banks dominate the organization that is
supposed to regulate them. Take a look at the 'public interest'
directors of the regional Fed banks if you want to have a sad laugh.

     "The fourth requirement is to develop a professional regulatory
culture. This takes time, and it can be lost. The examiners and
supervisors need to value expertise and be dedicated to their statutory
mission. They should have no interest in party. (To this day, I do not
know the political affiliations of my three regulatory colleagues that I
joined in meeting with the 'Keating Five.') They must believe that
(some) regulation can succeed or they will be defeated from the
beginning. They must limit their use of power and avoid conflicts of
interest. Good regulators do not have enemies lists even when their
opponents do have such lists. Michael Patriarca (the top S&L regulator
in the West) exemplified this element. His order to us with regard to
Charles Keating's Lincoln Savings (the most infamous 'control fraud' of
the S&L debacle) was that we would always walk 'square corners' in our
regulation of that S&L and every other S&L. Self-restraint is essential,
but so are two related cultural elements -- integrity and courage.
Chairman Gray knew that reregulating the industry would destroy his
career. Michael Patriarca persisted in recommending that Lincoln Savings
be taken over even when Chairman Gray's successor (Danny Wall) made
clear that he was enraged by that recommendation and even though Wall's
chief of staff warned Patriarca that Keating was so powerful and vicious
that 'they can get you in ways you'll never know you've been gotten.'
(Note that despite a track record of unmatched regulatory success and
integrity neither the Bush nor the Obama administration has appointed
Patriarca as a regulatory leader or even sought his advice.)"

     Black is also a white-collar criminologist. His research focuses on
elite frauds ("control frauds") that control seemingly legitimate
organizations and use them as "weapons" of fraud -- and the financial
crises such frauds produce.

For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020, (202) 421-6858; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167



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