Geithner Urges Quick Action on Rules Revamp; Fed’s Role Debated
By Alison Vekshin
July 8 (Bloomberg) -- Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner
urged lawmakers to quickly pass legislation enacting President
Barack Obama’s overhaul of U.S. financial rules, as Democrats
pushed back on plans to expand the Federal Reserve’s powers.
“He gave a very strong argument to move quickly on it
while we have the political will to make it happen,”
Representative Carolyn Maloney, a New York Democrat, said
yesterday after a two-hour, private meeting with Geithner and
members of the House Financial Services Committee in Washington.
Geithner outlined the Obama administration’s plan, which
would create a Consumer Financial Protection Agency, establish a
new authority to unwind large financial institutions and merge
two banking agencies into a single regulator. The Treasury
secretary, who didn’t speak to reporters, attended the briefing
as Congress holds hearings to turn the plan into legislation.
The lawmakers questioned Geithner on the proposal to give
the Federal Reserve new authority to monitor institutions that
may pose a systemic risk to markets and the economy, Maloney,
chairman of Congress’s Joint Economic Committee, said in an
interview.
Geithner was pressed about “the powers in the Fed, why
were the powers not used more effectively in the past?” Maloney
said in recounting the closed-door discussion. “What guarantee
is that they would be used more in the future?”
The Treasury secretary told lawmakers the Fed lacks the
authority to regulate companies such as insurer American
International Group Inc., which needed a U.S. rescue that has
expanded to $182.5 billion to avoid a systemic failure, and he
said the proposed change “would allow the regulation of all the
interconnected areas,” Maloney said.
System ‘Failure’
Geithner, a former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of
New York, acknowledged the central bank’s role in the financial
crisis, said Representative Randy Neugebauer, a Texas
Republican, said after the meeting.
“There was failure throughout the system,” Neugebauer
said. “He’s not defending the Fed was Snow White in this
situation.”
Neugebauer said lawmakers raised an issue about the policy
of “too big to fail,” in which the government must step in to
support the companies whose collapse would disrupt the financial
markets.
Geithner “in many ways agrees” that the policy needs to
be addressed, Neugebauer, a Texas Republican, said in an
interview. The government should avoid “a situation where we
are picking the companies that are systemically risky,” he
said.
Representative Paul Kanjorski, a Pennsylvania Democrat and
chairman of the committee’s capital markets panel, said he had
reservations about giving the Fed new systemic-risk powers.
‘Failed to Perform’
“There are authorizations and responsibilities that the
Fed has had over a number of years now that it failed to perform
that went to the very substance of what happened in this
disaster that we’ve had,” Kanjorski said in an interview. “I
don’t necessarily like the preponderance of power put into one
independent agency.”
Representative Scott Garrett, a New Jersey Republican,
urged caution on adopting rules for over-the-counter
derivatives, the financial instruments derived from stocks,
bonds, loans, currencies and commodities.
“You have to recognize that derivatives are used by a
substantial number of firms that are out there, that they
provide an element to the marketplace that we can’t just close
down,” Garrett said. “Anything we do should not be stifling to
that marketplace.”
The meeting is the fifth in a series aimed at examining
causes of the financial crisis and consider reforms. Previous
sessions have featured former Federal Reserve Chairmen Paul
Volcker and Alan Greenspan. The event was sponsored by the non-
profit Bipartisan Policy Center.
To contact the reporter on this story:
Alison Vekshin in Washington at
avekshin@bloomberg.net
.
Last Updated: July 8, 2009 00:01 EDT