Sun.Star Cebu

Lessons for next US financial crisis from 3 former key officials

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Three officials who played vital roles in combating the 2008 financial crisis say they worry that the painful lessons from the banking system’s near-collapse a decade ago may be forgotten.

“It is important that people focus on the lessons,” said former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson. “We are not sure people remember everything they need to remember.”

Paulson, who was at the Treasury’s helm when the crisis erupted in the fall of 2008, and Timothy Geithner, who succeeded him in 2009, joined Ben Bernanke, the former Federal Reserve chairman, at a round-table discussion last week in advance of the 10th anniversar­y of the crisis.

On Sept. 11, former officials from the Fed, the Treasury and other agencies will meet at the Brookings Institutio­n in Washington to discuss what worked and what didn’t and what should be done to prepare for the next crisis.

Since President Donald Trump took office, momentum has grown within the administra­tion and among Congress’ Republican leaders to reverse parts of the DoddFrank financial overhaul law, which Congress passed in 2010 to tighten regulatory loopholes revealed by the crisis. Legislatio­n enacted this year makes modest changes to Dodd-Frank, mainly in exempting smaller banks from the stricter requiremen­ts.

Bernanke, Geithner and Paulson said that so far, the easing of parts of Dodd-Frank represente­d sensible changes. But they cautioned that deregulato­ry zeal could go too far and again leave the financial system vulnerable to excessive risk-taking.

“We let the financial system outgrow the protection­s we put in place in the Great Depression­s and ... made the system very fragile and vulnerable to panic,” Geithner said. “One of the most powerful lessons from this crisis should be that you want to work very hard to make sure that your defenses are robust.”

The 2008 crisis deepened a recession that had begun in late 2007 and turned it into the worst downturn since the 1930s, with 8.7 million people thrown out of work. Though the economy has created 19 million jobs since the depths of

The changes brought about by technology and globalizat­ion displaced many people in many communitie­s, and there was not an adequate effort to deal with these displaceme­nts.

BEN BERNANKE Former US Federal Reserve chairman

the downturn and the economy has expanded since 2009, the recovery has been the slowest in the post-World War II period and wage growth has languished.

The resulting economic discontent, fed by widening financial inequality, contribute­d to Trump’s presidenti­al victory. Similarly weak recoveries fueled populist backlashes in other nations, too.

“Financial crises, particular­ly big ones, do tend to get followed by a population reaction; that was certainly the case in the 1930s,” Bernanke said, alluding to the rise of Hitler in Germany and other fascist movements.

But Bernanke suggested that some disturbing trends — from worsening income inequality to a lack of upward mobility to the opioid epidemic — go back much further than 2008.

“The changes brought about by technology and globalizat­ion displaced many people in many communitie­s, and there was not an adequate effort to deal with these displaceme­nts,” he said.

The three agreed that one of their mistakes during the crisis was failing to adequately explain publicly why billions in bailout dollars were being provided to the big banks, whose executives were able to keep their huge bonuses even though they ran the institutio­ns that caused the crisis.

The three asserted that they had no choice but to use taxpayer money to stabilize the financial institutio­ns — money that was eventually repaid — because the only alternativ­e would have been to allow the entire banking system to collapse, with far graver consequenc­es for the country.

“The public was angry; they wanted to see us, if not punish the banks, (then) put limits on bonuses,” Paulson said. “I was totally ineffectiv­e at having the American people understand that what we were doing was for them and not for Wall Street.”

Paulson and the others expressed concerns about the huge budget deficits now being projected over the next decade as well as about restrictio­ns imposed on the Fed, the Treasury and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. in managing any future crises. The Dodd-Frank law restricted the ability of the Fed, the Treasury and other federal agencies to make the types of emergency loans to troubled banks that they did in 2008.

But they also noted that government officials confronted tough obstacles in 2008: They had to address the crisis with outdated laws ill-suited to managing the giant banks that needed bailouts. Government officials also faced a lame-duck President George W. Bush and a politicall­y polarized Congress.

At the same time, Geithner said, “We had the benefit of two presidents of two different parties at a very dangerous moment working together and a set of institutio­ns willing to work very cooperativ­ely,” Geithner said.

Such collaborat­ion, he said, is necessary to manage any significan­t economic threats./

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