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October 29, 2009 8:44 PM

Geithner: New Law Won't Mean More Bailouts

By
CBSNews
(AP)  Updated at 2:43 p.m. EDT

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said Thursday that giving the government the power to dismantle mammoth financial firms like Lehman Brothers will prevent future bailouts.

In a House hearing, Geithner refuted angry claims by Republicans and at least one Democrat that the proposal would create a category of firms deemed so big and influential to the broader economy that they wouldn't be allowed to fail.

"The only authority we would have would be to manage their failure," Geithner told the House Financial Services Committee.

The Obama administration and Rep. Barney Frank, the panel's chairman, want legislation that would enable federal regulators to identify and monitor big financial firms and step in to wind them down before they collapse.

Regulators have a similar authority with traditional banks but were powerless last year when investment bank Lehman Brothers and insurance giant American International Group teetered on the brink of collapse.

The government allowed Lehman Brothers to fail, helping to trigger the worst financial crisis in seven decades as nervous investors withdrew funds from money markets and credit lines froze. When it came to AIG, the Bush administration decided instead to swoop in with a hefty government bailout.

Frank, D-Mass., and Geithner said the latest proposal would prevent the government from having to decide between doing nothing and a costly rescue.

"Without the ability for the government to step in, manage the failure of a large firm and contain the risk of a fire spreading, we are resigned to repeat the experience of last fall," Geithner said.

If the bill passes the House, a list of systemically important companies wouldn't be released to the public. But these firms would eventually have to disclose to investors that they're under additional constraints.

The identification of any company as "too big to fail" is what Republicans and California Democratic Rep. Brad Sherman say implies a government rescue. Sherman called the proposal "TARP on steroids," referring to the last year's government rescue fund for banks.

Rep. Spencer Bachus of Alabama, the top Republican on the panel, said the plan also would put taxpayers on the hook to pay administrative costs of dissolving large firms.

Under the bill, the government would front the money to dismantle a company. If the firm doesn't have enough assets to repay the government, regulators would assess a fee to other firms with more than $10 billion in assets.

"For those who believe that those taxpayer losses would be recouped from surviving firms, I would direct their attention to the recent examples of GM, Chrysler, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and AIG," Bachus said.

Frank said that had the government had the power to act preemptively in these cases, a bailout might not have been needed.

At least one Democrat, Rep. Luis Gutierrez, said he thought large financial firms should be forced to prepay into an insurance-like fund. The concept was endorsed by Sheila Bair, who chairs the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

"The fund should be set up just in case their behavior - their reckless, dangerous and risky behavior - raises its ugly head again," said Gutierrez, D-Ill.

Bair and other federal regulators told the panel that they agreed with Geithner that a "resolution authority" within the government was necessary to prevent future bailouts.

Banks told lawmakers that they oppose putting the FDIC in charge of dismantling failing nonbank firms. Banks pay the FDIC to insure deposits, and they don't want their premiums to pay for the FDIC's new power.

"If our fund is strong and a major nonbank fails, there will be a strong temptation to unfairly raid the bank FDIC fund to pay for it," said Edward Yingling, president of the American Bankers Association, in prepared testimony.

Bair said the FDIC was best equipped to handle the job.

"My hope is that this is not something that would have to be used a lot, if ever," she said.

AP
Add a Comment
by reality42 October 29, 2009 10:02 PM EDT
Big Timmy is a crook and the world looks at the USSA as a joke now with Timmy running the cash register---Tax Cheat that say he doesn't know but he is running the USSA money Wow what a laugh hahahah
Reply to this comment
by stuart-johns2 October 29, 2009 5:16 PM EDT
Screw the republicans and their too big to fail mentality. America wants no more bailouts. If we need a bailout, it's to bail America out from these too big to fail corporations.

It's the republicans who support these hugh firms; who are in bed with these corporations and defends them. Some Democrats are too. So why would they criticize a bailout?

This is just more political postering for votes in 2010 that's all. The criticism from the far right is still designed to see Obama fail.
Reply to this comment
by lightningF October 29, 2009 3:52 PM EDT
Why can we just not let them fail? The government does not need to wind down anything,every time the government gets involved with business We the Tax Payers get screwed.
Reply to this comment
by stn_sage October 29, 2009 12:31 PM EDT
I forgot to mention...Geithner is just another Wall Street insider that candidate Obama pledged he would NEVER hire!

One of many, in fact, that make up and run his administration!

So, it's NO coincidence we're having EXPANDING economic problems under the Obama administration!

When you turn 'the broken system' over to the guys 'who broke it' and expect them to 'fix it'...don't be surprised WHEN it doesn't happen!!
Reply to this comment
by stn_sage October 29, 2009 12:15 PM EDT
This is another 'fast one', folks!

And if a firm does fail, the government would be able to sidestep a bailout by dismantling the company in such a way that it would minimize the economic impact. (fm the article)

...What kind of dismantlement do you suppose they have in mind? Like, for instance, another bailout? You betcha! This isn't needed!
Bankruptcy Law exists for this very contingency!

But, they want to BYPASS that, by throwing it into a state where they can then take whatever measures they want...and that is, BAILOUTS!

This new law is designed as another measure to insulate Wall Street AND the private banking system from financial responsibility, accountability, AND transparency!

'Too big, to fail' is still the motto AND policy of the U.S. Government!
Reply to this comment
by endurorob_5 October 29, 2009 11:58 AM EDT
"And if a firm does fail, the government would be able to sidestep a bailout by dismantling the company in such a way that it would minimize the economic impact."


That is code for gavernment takover of private business.
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