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Illinois Economy

Volcker Says US Bank Oversight Ineffective

While the headline sounds like its from the 1980's, AP Business Writer Marcy Gordon wrote about a new report from a group led by Paul Volcker.

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker is calling for a reshaping of the U.S. financial oversight regime, which he says is splintered and ineffective.

A public policy group led by Volcker issued a report Monday on the regulation of banks and Wall Street. It says the array of government agencies that oversee the financial system has changed little since the Depression-era 1930s and can't keep up with a fast-moving industry. It calls for a simpler setup. 

Under the Volcker Alliance's recommendations, the Federal Reserve would keep primary responsibility for financial stability. However, authority shouldn't be ``overly concentrated'' in one agency, the group maintains. A new, independent Prudential Supervisory Authority would assume the oversight functions now exercised by the Fed, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. for banks, and by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission for brokerage firms, money market funds and futures dealers.

The SEC, the primary regulator of the securities markets, and the CFTC, which oversees futures and options markets and exchanges, would be merged together.

``Failure to reorganize the regulatory structure will contribute to the buildup of systemic risk and make us more vulnerable to the next financial crisis,'' the report says.

Volcker and his colleagues acknowledge that changes shaking up the status quo don't come easily. More than 25 such proposals have been advanced since World War II, without success, the report notes.

The 2010 law enacted after the financial crisis brought the most sweeping overhaul of consumer and finance rules since the Depression. It left largely intact, however, the system of regulation in which different agencies oversee different types of banks and financial institutions.

Volcker, who served as Fed chairman from 1979 to 1987, headed President Barack Obama's Economic Recovery Advisory Board during the crisis. He also advised lawmakers as they shaped the financial overhaul package. His thinking was behind a provision in the law that became the Volcker Rule, which limits high-risk trading bets by big banks that could implode at taxpayers' expense.

The regulatory system was stitched together like a quilt over a century and a half. After financial scandals or crises, the government patched the system _ often by adding a new office _ to improve oversight of problem banks.

Critics like Volcker say the patchwork system breeds ``regulatory arbitrage,'' allowing banks and other financial institutions to shop for the regulator that will be the most lenient. Turf fights among agencies, conflicting priorities and overlapping authorities prevail, they say.

Bill is a former general manager, economy reporter, Harvest correspondent and Statehouse Bureau Chief for NPR Illinois. He has won several awards including the Associated Press Best Investigative Reporter.
The Associated Press is one of the largest and most trusted sources of independent newsgathering, supplying a steady stream of news to its members, international subscribers and commercial customers. AP is neither privately owned nor government-funded; instead, it's a not-for-profit news cooperative owned by its American newspaper and broadcast members.
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