The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)
Trump plans to ‘free’ Wall St from regulations if he wins
A SECOND Trump White House would seek to sharply reduce the power of US financial regulators, according to a review of public documents and interviews with people allied with the former president.
In the wake of the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, Congress dramatically expanded the U.S. government’s oversight of the financial industry to prevent a repeat of the 2008 global banking meltdown.
Donald Trump would likely renew his efforts to scale back those reforms, if elected, as well as pare protections for smallscale investors and borrowers, and allow companies to raise money with less scrutiny, according to the interviews and proposals from groups positioned to influence a new conservative administration.
Sources told Reuters that experts and Trump allies are pitching regulatory rewrites, identifying potential staff and floating ideas on TV, in op-eds and directly to Trump.
Some of the ideas in Trump's current policy orbit have long circulated in conservative economic conversation. They include curtailing the Dodd-frank Act, a set of post-2008 financial crisis rules intended to reduce systemic risk. Another idea is to make it easier for private companies to raise capital — in turn opening access to less transparent and more difficult-to-trade private funds and securities.
More recent policy ideas include attacking environmental, social and governance investments and disclosures, which help screen businesses based on socially conscious factors, or potential dramatic cuts to staff at regulators through a mechanism known as Schedule F, which would reclassify up to 50,000 civil servants across the government as easily-replaceable political appointees.
Karoline Leavitt, national press secretary for the Trump campaign, said Trump had success in peeling back regulations during his administration.
The Trump administration, with mixed success, worked to reverse a range of Obama-era rules, such as those that eased regulations for Wall Street banks or “fiduciary” rules for brokers.