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Elizabeth Warren: We Need Resolution Authority

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CNN's Jessica Yellin talks to TARP Congressional Oversight Chair Elizabeth Warren about the details of her report about to be released to Congress. Warren stressed the need to get legislation passed to give the government resolution authority over these "too-big-to-fail" institutions so the taxpayers aren't put on the hook again when they "mess up". That's a kind way to put it, but she's right.

You've gotta' love Jessica Yellin asking if it's "un-American" to regulate these industries. Unbelievable. I've got to wonder just how much more out of control she thinks they should be allowed to get before it's "American" to do something about it.

YELLIN: Well, the white house plan is just the latest controversy over T.A.R.P. the Congressional oversight committee is about to release a December report, a detailed review of T.A.R.P. to date. Elizabeth Warren is the chair of the T.A.R.P. Congressional oversight committee and joins me now from Washington.

Elizabeth, so good to see you again. The bailout, we know, was unpopular, as the president acknowledged today. But I remember a year ago, the prognosticators were warning of economic calamity. People certainly are hurting today, more than 60 million unemployed. But a second great Congressional didn't happen. So could we argue that the bailout actually worked?

WARREN: Absolutely. One of the things that we conclude in our report, which will be out tomorrow, is that the bailout was part of a larger, strong government response that probably kept this economy from tumbling over the abyss. So in that sense, we have to admit T.A.R.P. did its job. Now, T.A.R.P. was also supposed to do a lot of other things and we should also evaluate along those metrics. But for the number one thing, that is stop the crisis and stop that feeling that it's all tumbling into depression, it did it.

YELLIN: All right. Let's talk about some of the other things. It was supposed to unfreeze credit and make sure credit was flowing. It was supposed to help keep jobs and businesses from laying off employees. It was supposed to help homeowners in some way through a trickle-down effect to keep their homes. How well has it scored on some of those measures?

WARREN: Not well. And that's the bottom line for this report. And we're going to go through each one of those. But you've really hit the key ones. I would only add to it, it was also supposed to help the banks clean up their balance sheets, to put them in a position where they would be more stable over time. And, in fact, remember, it was named the troubled assets relief program. The money has not been used for that. But T.A.R.P. also came with one other piece. That is, it has now created an implicit guarantee, so that we have the notion that if the largest financial institutions, the ones now called too big to fail, get into trouble again, that the American taxpayer will be forced to come to the rescue. So T.A.R.P. did some really good things, but it has really created a different economic environment.

YELLIN: I want to come back to too big to fail in a moment about but let me stick with T.A.R.P. and some of the issues it failed on. You've been an outspoken critic of some of the ways it was monitored, the way -- the lack of transparency. What do you think is the fundamental problem here? Do you think that the officials in the treasury department are too close to Wall Street?

WARREN: You know, it -- the T.A.R.P. program has had the problem from the beginning that it has been really, really good at shoveling hundreds of billions of dollars into the largest financial institutions managed to cut through the paperwork and do that on, you know, two pages in the space of hours that it could make that happen. For homeowners in financial distress, people facing foreclosure, we're a year into this and right now we're just seeing the tiniest little trickle of help go to homeowners. On the jobs front, we've watched the jobs get worse and worse as small businesses have been unable to get credit. So it really is fair to describe this program as saying, the part that put lots of money into really big financial institutions, boy, did they figure out how to make that work in a hurry. And all the rest of it, no one could ever quite seem to get it off the ground.

YELLIN: You can give me a simple yes or no on this. Would Wall Street bonuses be as big as they are this year if it weren't for T.A.R.P.?

WARREN: No.

YELLIN: So let's talk about the positive, what we could do next, what could change? There is financial regulation moving through Congress right now. I know you're a big advocate for one element in all of that, to change this too big to fail concept. Is it possible for government to end too big to fail? Or is that sort of un-American? Should we not be telling banks how they can run their own business?

WARREN: No. In fact, I think it's just the other way. The American economy, a capitalist economy, a free economy runs on the principle that if you really mess it up, you will be held responsible. You know, every family in America, every business in America, every small bank in America, everyone except the largest financial institutions have to pay the consequences if they get out there and take big risks and end up having a bad business plan, a bad outcome, messing it up.

YELLIN: So have you saying the government should break up big banks?

WARREN: No. What I'm saying is we need to find a way that we can credibly say, believably say to every financial institution, the same as we do to every other business and every other family -- if you mess it up bad enough, you, too, can be liquidated. In order to do that, we can use a combination of what's called resolution authority. I'm of the old school. I call it bankruptcy. And regulation to try to prevent that from happening in the first place. But this is the bill that's now trying to work its way through Congress. Until we get that bill in place, we live in a world where these largest financial institutions can take all the risks they want and you and I are going to be on the hook to pay for it if they mess it up.

YELLIN: Finally there's an idea of creating a new agency designed only to protect consumers, to eliminate credit card tricks and traps, make sure your bank is honest with you. The opponents of this say it's really a back doorway for government to control big business, tell them what kind of credit cards we can or can't get and it would limit innovation. Is this an anti-business measure?

WARREN: No. This is a pro-family measure. What this is really about is saying, we have a credit card market and other consumer market now that's just plain broken. You can't compare credit cards anymore and tell what the real cost is. You can't compare mortgages and tell what the real cost is. This says we're going to have simple product that people can make direct apples to apples comparisons. And when they do that, they will know exactly what costs they're taking on. They will know what risks they're taking on.

And if they can make choices in the marketplace, then the market starts to work for them. We think costs are going to go down and consumer choice ultimately is going to go up. You know, there is nothing that we touch, taste, feel or smell that doesn't have underlying it some basic safety regulations except for consumer credit. That's the area where you can be tricked and you can be trapped by your credit card company, by your mortgage company, by a payday lender and you won't know until after they've already taken the money from you. We can't live in that world anymore. It doesn't work for families. It doesn't work for our economy.

YELLIN: Elizabeth Warren, we'll look forward to reading your report tomorrow. I know there's some news in there. Thank you for joining us.

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24 Comments
follow the money's picture

she needs a pair of heels with some teeth in it..That way, anybody using the so called Tarp (troubled assets relief program) money will get kicked out, and thrown into jail. Yes, in the beginning there was no transparency here, remember these stories?????
9/20/08:
"Bush seeking $700 Billion for bailout"
msnbc
12/10/08:
Oversight Panel Questions Bank Bailout"
by Jim Kuhnhenn/AP
12/15/08:
"Bush Administration created executive pay loophole"
by John Byrne
12/20/08:

"Paulson calls for release of Bailout"
washington

12/22/08:
"Bailed Out bankers take home $1.6Billion"
By Frank Bass, and Rita Beamish/AP
12/23/08:
"Bailed out Banks not disclosing spending"
by Matt Apuzzo
12/23/08:
"Lawmaker wants rest of bailout fund released"
washington
1/01/08:
"Bailout not easy to keep track of"
washington

To Mr Obama, I'd give that lady, Mrs warren some backing, and some power, and get the law on her side, so she can straighten out some of these companys. I'd vote for her, to kick them off their high horse, and also get some of these great reporters in there also, because they investigate.

Peter G's picture

be depression. A quick edit is required I think. Quibble aside, an excellent post.


Hasa Diga Eebowai

KWillow's picture

we use the People's Tax Dollars to bail out these villains. If we Won't regulate them, then we Should NOT Rescue them from the horrors for their criminal stupidity.

Grabbing billions of the People/Government's money to pay themselves huge bonus's OUGHT to put them in the control of the Payer.

Lord, I'd have loved to see ALL these men thrown out of their mansions into the street along with their furniture; leave them to find out where the nearest Shelter is. How I despise them. And our Administration, as well. The Obama Administration's actions are utterly contemptible. I regret voting for him. If I'd even imagined how he would 'run' things, I'd have stayed home.

Neoatg's picture

Endorse abortion, evolution, gay rights, and Separation of church and state then in people's like that will believe it is “American” to do something about them.

Teddy Phufner's picture

to allow for Corporate fascism??????

Gotta love the MSM calling into question the patriotism of regulating banks which got bailed out for gambling trillions of dollars and losing.

And limit innovation? You mean to limit the ability of wall street to steal from the rest of us, than yeah. How come the "innovation" angle is never talked in terms of helping spur education and sustainable local business?

CNN lives in a dysfunctional household as long as they contract Republicans.

It's become apparent that CNN is also now dysfunctional. I hope they get well.

People are not going to let the media pretend the Republicans aren't sick much longer.


"Government by organized money is just as dangerous as Government by organized mob"
-= Franklin Delano Roosevelt =-

Good on ya, Elizabeth.

Used to see her on Moyers' show and wonder why people like this couldn't be running the country. Intelligent, informed and putting the well-being of average Americans first. Cheers.

yep.


"Government by organized money is just as dangerous as Government by organized mob"
-= Franklin Delano Roosevelt =-

Mike V.'s picture

I know that's not necessarily saying much, but still..
We need more like her.

KWillow's picture

is slowly, but surely turning up the heat on their already simmering base. People are sputtering about the staggering rip-off of People by Obama&Wall Street UnLimited; and when the horrifying new "Health Plan" bill is shown to be a huge money gift to the Insurance companies, the backlash will be frightening.

profiteers just like they did the war profiteers and the enrgy profiteers, and the finance profiteers. That base backlash is one mean bitch.


“Why would anyone with a functioning brain believe this guy?”
Some guy with an eating disorder

BlueSam's picture

your cynicism is well founded in this regard.

These blogs are shutting down the corporate masters daily.

Haven't you heard?

So I'll say it again. WDC and the Insurance/Pharma industry will do nothing for the peoples' interest.

STOP BUYING THE PRODUCT. NOW.

Milquetoast's picture

The bailout was a wonderful thing that probly saved us from a "depression" (yeah right)

...but we must make a resolution so that taxpayers will never have to save the world from a depression again?

the bailout was "pennies from heaven) but ...we can never allow that to happen again?


audit-prosecute-incarcerate

Milquetoast's picture

a resolution to allow capitalism to "function normally again"


audit-prosecute-incarcerate

Tax the Rich's picture

Saying all the right things, while quietly doing absolutely nothing!

- Your corporate owned democratic party since 1993.


If I were a psychopath, I would join the republican party, and get in on the gravy train taking the Teabircher morons to the cleaners.

ricky's picture

How bout since 33? We had a chance for a real worker's paradise.


“Why would anyone with a functioning brain believe this guy?”
Some guy with an eating disorder

panelfurniture's picture
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panelfurniture's picture
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panelfurniture's picture
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Kreskin's picture

asking if it's "un-American" to regulate these industries ? I knew we were heading there but I didn't know that it is official and we are now a fascist country .What is this the Twilight zone ? Absolute insanity , clearly these people have lost their friggin minds . Sheer F'n evil at work . I'm not happy with Obama or the Dems ,about 1/4 of them not Dems at all but Republicans calling themselves Democrats but God almighty , can you imagine if and when these people regain power and control ? You ( we ) thought the last eight years were a nightmare ? We had better be realistic and stop and think before we abandon Obama and the Dems . We are caught in a catch 22 folks .


Insanity , it is what it is , there is no understanding it .

Trittydi's picture

I LOVE this woman. You know that she really cares about the American people - so few in DC do.
*

taylorbad's picture

Nothing attracts me like an intelligent, well-spoken woman. Elizabeth Warren is on the top of my All-star list. If she were give greater authority to investigate and manage more of what comes out of Washington, D.C. and the federal financial system, I would feel safer and more confident about our nation's future. Can't love her enough!


The person who defines Reality wins.

BlueSam's picture

and really gets it.

Give her some teeth to go with her position and let her work through this mess with some real authority.

oldretire's picture

Bend over drop the panties and REACH ACROSS the AISLE.

Its just talk, talk and moe talk, if there was intent at resolution ofthe problem(s), we would be getting action instead of words. Notice how EVERYONE has GOTTEN EVERYTING they have WANTED from the banks to the Insurance Industry of DEATH.

This is suppose to be the party in power, hahahahaha,

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