The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Emboldened by Trump, banks push to throw off old rule constraint­s

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WASHINGTON: Emboldened by President Trump’s pledge to loosen laws introduced following the 2007-2009 global financial crisis, US banks are pushing to scrap or revise more than a dozen other lesser-known rules they say are outdated, costly and hurt economic growth.

Many would have been revised a decade ago, but changes were shelved during the financial crisis and the fierce political battle over the 2010 Dodd Frank Act that imposed a new layer of restrictio­ns.

With Congress now poised to pass the first rewrite of Dodd Frank backed by key Democrats, and as Trump-appointed regulators strike a much more industryfr­iendly tone, banks see the changing atmosphere as an opportunit­y for a sweeping overhaul.

“The feeling is there are many rules that are so old that they’re out of sync with what you need to promote economic growth and that’s a conversati­on policymake­rs are now willing to have,” said Wayne Abernathy, executive vice president at the American Bankers Associatio­n, a bank trade group.

Reuters has identified around 15 pre-crisis rules that bankers and lobbyists want to change, based on multiple interviews, disclosure forms, and advocacy documents submitted to the administra­tion, its appointed officials and lawmakers.

While promising considerab­le savings, most changes should be far less contentiou­s than tweaking Dodd Frank, which aims to curb excessive risk-taking and predatory lending, lobbyists say.

Still, some proposals face resistance from consumer groups and business advocates warning they could erode customer protection and hurt small businesses.

Laws targeted by banks include the Civil War-era False Claims Act; the 1933 Securities Act; the Federal Deposit Insurance Act of 1950; the 1956 Bank Holding Company Act; the Bank Secrecy Act of 1970; a raft of lending laws including the 1977 Community Reinvestme­nt Act; the 1991 Telephone Consumer Protection Act; the 2001 Patriot Act and the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, among others.

Having accumulate­d over decades, albeit with occasional tweaks, together they are as costly and as much of an impediment to lending and economic growth as Dodd Frank, bankers say. — Reuters

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