The Dodd-Frank bank reform bill: A deeply flawed success
In a world where incremental progress is all but impossible to achieve, this is what a triumph looks like
By Andrew LeonardNow that the newly dubbed "Dodd-Frank" bank reform bill is all but complete -- awaiting President Obama's signature, possibly on July 4 -- what are we supposed to think? Is it a good bill? Will it rein in the financial sector? Will the words "Dodd-Frank" ring through the history with the same awesome knell as "Glass-Steagal"?
Let's start with the easy question first. Dodd-Frank is no Glass-Steagal. Glass-Steagal separated commercial and investment banking with one stroke of a giant Chinese meat cleaver -- no ambiguity allowed. Dodd-Frank is the polar opposite, a concatenation of intricate compromises tied up in 2,000 pages of complexity so dense that it willfully defies comprehension. Maybe the most optimistic way to think of this bill is as a stimulus program to create jobs for securities lawyers -- they'll be chewing on it for decades to come.
1 Comments:
Dodd-Frank Act (Draft) actually promotes the expansion of sub-prime lending in Title XII.
See: Dodd-Frank Act: Title XII commentary
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