Bill Clinton and the GLB Act

cawacko

Well-known member
This one's for you Desh.


Bill v. Barack on Banks
Clinton instructs Obama on finance and Phil Gramm.

A running cliché of the political left and the press corps these days is that our current financial problems all flow from Congress's 1999 decision to repeal the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933 that separated commercial and investment banking. Barack Obama has been selling this line every day. Bill Clinton signed that "deregulation" bill into law, and he knows better.


APIn BusinessWeek.com, Maria Bartiromo reports that she asked the former President last week whether he regretted signing that legislation. Mr. Clinton's reply: "No, because it wasn't a complete deregulation at all. We still have heavy regulations and insurance on bank deposits, requirements on banks for capital and for disclosure. I thought at the time that it might lead to more stable investments and a reduced pressure on Wall Street to produce quarterly profits that were always bigger than the previous quarter.

"But I have really thought about this a lot. I don't see that signing that bill had anything to do with the current crisis. Indeed, one of the things that has helped stabilize the current situation as much as it has is the purchase of Merrill Lynch by Bank of America, which was much smoother than it would have been if I hadn't signed that bill."
One of the writers of that legislation was then-Senator Phil Gramm, who is now advising John McCain, and who Mr. Obama described last week as "the architect in the United States Senate of the deregulatory steps that helped cause this mess." Ms. Bartiromo asked Mr. Clinton if he felt Mr. Gramm had sold him "a bill of goods"?
Mr. Clinton: "Not on this bill I don't think he did. You know, Phil Gramm and I disagreed on a lot of things, but he can't possibly be wrong about everything. On the Glass-Steagall thing, like I said, if you could demonstrate to me that it was a mistake, I'd be glad to look at the evidence.

"But I can't blame [the Republicans]. This wasn't something they forced me into. I really believed that given the level of oversight of banks and their ability to have more patient capital, if you made it possible for [commercial banks] to go into the investment banking business as Continental European investment banks could always do, that it might give us a more stable source of long-term investment."

We agree that Mr. Clinton isn't wrong about everything. The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act passed the Senate on a 90-8 vote, including 38 Democrats and such notable Obama supporters as Chuck Schumer, John Kerry, Chris Dodd, John Edwards, Dick Durbin, Tom Daschle -- oh, and Joe Biden. Mr. Schumer was especially fulsome in his endorsement.

As for the sins of "deregulation" more broadly, this is a political fairy tale. The least regulated of our financial institutions -- hedge funds -- have posed the least systemic risks in the current panic. The big investment banks that got into the most trouble could have made the same mortgage investments before 1999 as they did afterwards. One of their problems was that Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns weren't diversified enough. They prospered for years through direct lending and high leverage via the likes of asset-backed securities without accepting commercial deposits. But when the panic hit, this meant they lacked an adequate capital cushion to absorb losses.

Meanwhile, commercial banks that had heavier capital requirements were struggling to compete with the Wall Street giants throughout the 1990s. Some of the deposit-taking banks that were allowed to diversify after 1999, such as J.P. Morgan and Bank of America, are now in a stronger position to withstand the current turmoil. They have been able to help stabilize the financial system through acquisitions of Bear Stearns, Washington Mutual, Merrill Lynch and Countrywide Financial.

Mr. Obama's "deregulation" trope may be good politics, but it's bad history and is dangerous if he really believes it. The U.S. is going to need a stable, innovative financial system after this panic ends, and we won't get that if Mr. Obama and his media chorus think the answer is to return to Depression-era rules amid global financial competition. Perhaps the Senator should ask the former President for a briefing.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122282635048992995.html
 
I never thought I would see that day that an unsigned op-ed in the Wall Street Journal would cite approvingly to President Clinton.

But, I suppose his legacy on GLB is their legacy on being anti-regulation generally. Both have reputations to protect.
 
I never thought I would see that day that an unsigned op-ed in the Wall Street Journal would cite approvingly to President Clinton.

But, I suppose his legacy on GLB is their legacy on being anti-regulation generally. Both have reputations to protect.

If Al Sharpton and Pat Robertson can come together anything is possible. Clinton did advocate for free trade. He received props from those on the right for it.
 
No it was for being a Democrat. You do realize that he was set up by the Rs to lie under oath.

The entire time Newt was banging his aide and lied in his divorce procedings.
 
Oh please!


are you aware who helped poor little Paula deside to prosicute Clinton for her trying to fuck him?
 
Who gives a fuck about the impeachment! God, it was a decade ago.

Bill is right. I have yet to hear anyone explain how repeal of Glass Steagall caused this crisis (cue desh to post something irrelevant from wikipedia that she does not understand) and if it were in place right now the BofA purchase of Merrill Lynch and others like it might not have been possible.
 
LMAO.... and THAT somehow MADE him lie????


What person is going to admitt in a court of law they have cheated on their spouse if they believe it is unprovable.

Yes he lied but he lied about a consentual sex act that had nothing to do with a case that was thrown out of court because it was bullshit in the first place.
 
What person is going to admitt in a court of law they have cheated on their spouse if they believe it is unprovable.

Yes he lied but he lied about a consentual sex act that had nothing to do with a case that was thrown out of court because it was bullshit in the first place.

And please tell us again what this has to do with the GLB?
 
What person is going to admitt in a court of law they have cheated on their spouse if they believe it is unprovable.

Yes he lied but he lied about a consentual sex act that had nothing to do with a case that was thrown out of court because it was bullshit in the first place.

A PERSON WHO DOESN'T WISH TO BREAK THE FUCKING LAW.

aka AN HONEST PERSON???
 
Who gives a fuck about the impeachment! God, it was a decade ago.

Bill is right. I have yet to hear anyone explain how repeal of Glass Steagall caused this crisis (cue desh to post something irrelevant from wikipedia that she does not understand) and if it were in place right now the BofA purchase of Merrill Lynch and others like it might not have been possible.



I don't think the repeal caused the crisis but it exacerbated it, made it more widespread. I think it would have been a more compartmentalized crisis than we currently have with G-S in place. I also think we'd have a much better sense of what securities are exactly out there if G-S were still law, more transparency.

On the second point, having new and bigger institutions that are too bigger to fail is not necessarily a good thing.
 
I don't think the repeal caused the crisis but it exacerbated it, made it more widespread. I think it would have been a more compartmentalized crisis than we currently have with G-S in place. I also think we'd have a much better sense of what securities are exactly out there if G-S were still law, more transparency.

On the second point, having new and bigger institutions that are too bigger to fail is not necessarily a good thing.
I fully agree with your second point. Once it is "too big to fail" it should literally translate as "too big to exist" and it should be separated and sold, much of it privatized. We should never have institutions that are "too big to fail" so that we have to spend billions saving them. It generally secures bad behavior for the future. Why would you show restraint when you know the government will step in and keep you going?
 
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