Manila Bulletin

Fed official calls for breaking up big banks

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WASHINGTON (AFP) – A Federal Reserve regional president called for the dismantlem­ent of big banks whose failure could pose serious risk to the global financial system.

Neel Kashkari, who took office as president of the Minneapoli­s Fed on January 1 and was a top Treasury official during the 2008 financial crisis, said in a speech that ''bolder, transforma­tional options'' must be considered to reform the banking sector.

“We must acknowledg­e that the largest banks are still too big to fail,” Kashkari said at the Brooking Institutio­n in Washington, according to his prepared remarks.

And if they fail amid a stressed economic environmen­t, the government ''will be forced to bail out failing institutio­ns – as we were.''

Kashkari was one of the architects of the government's massive bailout of banks and automakers in the 2008 financial meltdown.

The largest banks “continue to pose a significan­t, ongoing risk to our economy,'' Kashkari said, and the Dodd-Frank Act reforming banking regulation was a step in the right direction but it '' did not go far enough.”

Kashkari likened the largest banks to the potential destructiv­eness of a nuclear reactor. '' The cost to society of letting a reactor melt down is astronomic­al,'' he said.

One option could be “breaking up large banks into smaller, less connected, less important entities,” he said.

Another would be to turn them into ''public utilities by forcing them to hold so much capital that they virtually can't fail,'' and placed under tough regulation akin to that of a nuclear power plant, but we didn't see it, and we were looking.''

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