The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Trump plans to ‘free’ Wall St from regulation­s if he wins

- Reuters

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.

 ?? ?? Trump cuts a red tape at the White House in 2017.
Trump cuts a red tape at the White House in 2017.

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