The Borneo Post

Post-crisis bank rules survive attacks, consumer protection­s at risk

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WASHINGTON: Tougher US bank regulation­s designed to prevent another crippling financial meltdown have survived threats to undermine and weaken them – but the consumer protection­s that were a key feature remain at risk.

One of the architects of the postcrisis regulation­s says President Donald Trump’s regulators have been “wrecking” the agency designed to shield consumers from some of the deceptive practices that helped precipitat­e the 2008 financial crisis.

Thosepract­icesinclud­edoffering products such as interest- only home loans that forced monthly payments to explode in the later years, which the borrower could not afford.

Trump has repeatedly pledged to make cutting regulation­s a central goal of his presidency and he has support from Republican­s in Congress who had been working to dilute the tougher rules on banks.

However, retired Massachuse­tts legislator Barney Frank, one of the driving forces behind the Dodd- Frank banking reform bill, told AFP he was satisfied his namesake legislatio­n had survived and would continue to flash warning lights if banks get into risky situations.

That will ensure the government is not again forced to use taxpayer funds to bail out a financial institutio­n.

Rolling back regulation Still he remains concerned about what Trump’s regulators are doing to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), created by Dodd-Frank, because “the right wing hates this notion that the government has to protect people from the private sector.” “It is very clear that well over 95 percent of that bill in terms of its importance is now rock solid,” Frank said in an interview, referring to the reform Congress passed this summer.

The only area where there has been serious damage has been from Mick Mulvaney, Trump’s interim choice to lead the CFPB, a frequent critic of the agency’s very existence, let alone its aggressive enforcemen­t, he said.

Mulvaney has said the bureau “is far too powerful,” and has taken steps to curb that power: he imposed a hiring freeze and a review of litigation.

New cases have come to a halt since he took over, according to reports, and officials have reversed or weakened scrutiny of auto loans – one of the fastest growing types of debt nationwide – payday lenders, and data to track racial discrimina­tion in home mortgage lending.

“I regret that but that’s not a stability issue,” Frank said.

And the agency has not been changed through legislatio­n and could be restored by a future administra­tion.

Aaron Klein, an expert on regulation­s at the Brookings Institutio­n, said, “The biggest change to Dodd-Frank has been the changefrom Obama-eraregulat­ors to Trump- era regulators.” “That change dwarfs any legal changes that have occurred to the act, by orders of magnitude,” he told AFP, noting that Mulvaney, a White House budget official, had “deeply politicize­d” the agency, weakening its role as “an active police force” that guards against misconduct by financial services providers. — AFP

 ??  ?? Trump has repeatedly pledged to make cutting regulation­s a central goal of his presidency and he has support from Republican­s in Congress who had been working to dilute the tougher rules on banks. — AFP photo
Trump has repeatedly pledged to make cutting regulation­s a central goal of his presidency and he has support from Republican­s in Congress who had been working to dilute the tougher rules on banks. — AFP photo

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