Paulson Warns Against Regulation Overkill
Treasury Secretary Sees "Long-Term Harm" To Economy If U.S., World Adopt Severe Regulation
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Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson speaks during a news conference at the Treasury Department in Washington, Nov. 12, 2008. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)
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Play CBS Video Video House Hammers Paulson Treasury Sec. Henry Paulson went before Congress to discuss the $700 billion bailout that went to the banks instead of bad mortgages. Jim Axelrod reports.
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Video Did Paulson Mislead Congress? Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson's original rescue plan was to buy up bad mortgage investments. But now the Fed has announced it won't buy up those bad assets after all. Anthony Mason reports.
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Video Big Changes To Bailout Plan Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson has announced big changes to how the $700 billion bailout will be spent, abandoning the original plan's key strategy. Tara Mergener reports.
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Timeline Financial Meltdown Track major events that lead to one of the most tumultuous times in Wall Street's history.
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Interactive Eye On The Economy In-depth features on U.S. markets, taxes, employment and the Federal Reserve.
Paulson's remarks follow pledges by world leaders attending last week's emergency economic summit to begin an overhaul of the world's financial regulatory system.
With the next summit slated for the spring, the work on fleshing out details for the Herculean task will fall to the incoming administration of President-elect Barack Obama and his new Treasury secretary.
Paulson, whose boss President George W. Bush leaves office on Jan. 20, acknowledged that the financial crisis was caused by many factors including "government inaction and mistaken actions, outdated U.S. and global financial regulatory systems, and by the excessive risk-taking of financial institutions."
Still, he cautioned against the U.S. and other countries developing a too-onerous regulatory response.
"If we do not correctly diagnose the causes, and instead act in haste to implement more rather than better regulations, we can do long-term harm," Paulson said in a speech in Simi Valley, Calif.
Paulson's remarks followed more grim economic news, as new claims filed for unemployment insurance zoomed last week to 542,000, the highest since the summer of 1992, when the nation was recovering from a recession, the Labor Department reported.
Congressional leaders also indicated Thursday that they would put off any vote on an auto industry bailout until next month in the face of steady resistance from the Bush administration, despite the fact that a bipartisan group of several lawmakers announced a compromise proposal on a rescue package for Detroit's Big Three automakers.
Earlier this week, lawmakers blasted Paulson for his handling of a $700 billion financial bailout package to help ease the crisis and restore stability and confidence to unhinged markets.
Paulson on Thursday again defended his management, including his decision last week to officially abandon the original rescue strategy: buying rotten mortgages and other bad debts from banks to free up their balance sheets and get them to lend more freely.
"By proactively addressing the problems we saw coming and being pragmatic enough to change strategy in the face of changed facts and despite the inevitable criticism - we prevented a far worse financial crisis," Paulson insisted.
Focusing the bailout program on infusing billions into banks - and possibly other types of companies - to pump up their capital and bolster lending to customers was deemed a faster and more effective approach to stabilizing the financial system than the original centerpiece of the plan, he said.
"There was no playbook for responding to a once or twice in a hundred year event," Paulson argued, saying he needed to shift strategy to respond to worsening financial and economic conditions.
Paulson again said he believed the Bush administration has taken the necessary steps to prevent a financial market collapse, but he cautioned that it will take time for markets and lending conditions to return to normal.
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Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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Posted by peter776 at 04:38 PM : Nov 21, 2008
Nobody b!tches before an event, but after, suddenly everyone is an expert criticizing others after the fact. The ultimate Monday morning quarterbacking!
Point made!
down the way they know best.
watching out what is the next thing they get a way with murder with.
island like they do in survior.
Posted by standlee5 at 01:33 AM : Nov 21, 2008
You 6th grade drop outs are so embarrassing!! LOL Just this morning the HEADLINES are out there about the Market rebounding on hopes of the sale of Citibank and this poor embarrassing little Ditto Head just posted what he was told. We are in the middle of a financial crisis the likes of which even the Bush People admit is the worst in our lifetimes. Yet this uneducated loser wants to continue down the same path we''re on... doesn''t have the courage to say it so he buys this made up trash about Obama. Why would ANYONE want to continue the SAME policies that gave us the crisis. PLEASE, pick up a night class or two... LEARN to read and think for yourself.
You talk like we''re in ''post-crisis'' and now it''s time to create a new government dept. of "Lessons Learned".
Don''t make me laugh, get your stupid a** off the stage.
You''re a stuttering babbling idiot.
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