Author Topic: Dodd on new FINREG bill: "No one knows how its going to work until in place"  (Read 1419 times)

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House, Senate leaders finalize details of sweeping financial overhaul

By Brady Dennis
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, June 25, 2010; 8:02 AM




Key House and Senate lawmakers agreed on far-reaching new financial rules early Friday after weeks of division, delay and frantic last-minute deal making. The dawn compromise set up a potential vote in both houses of Congress next week that could send the landmark legislation to President Obama by July 4.

Lawmakers pulled an all-nighter, wrapping up their work at 5:39 a.m. -- more than 20 messy, mind-numbing, exhaustive hours after they began Thursday morning.

"It's a great moment. I'm proud to have been here," said a teary-eyed Sen. Christopher J. Dodd (D-Conn.), who as chairman of the Senate Banking Committee led the effort in the Senate. "No one will know until this is actually in place how it works. But we believe we've done something that has been needed for a long time. It took a crisis to bring us to the point where we could actually get this job done." Both the House and Senate must approve the compromise legislation before it can go to Obama for his signature.

Despite myriad changes in recent days, Democrats appear poised to deliver a final bill that largely reflects the administration's original blueprint unveiled almost precisely a year ago. While it would not fundamentally alter the shape of Wall Street or break up the nation's largest firms, the legislation would establish broad new oversight of the financial system.

A new consumer protection bureau housed in the Federal Reserve would have independent funding, an independent leader and near-total autonomy to write and enforce rules. The government would have broad new powers to seize and wind down large, failing financial firms and to oversee the $600-trillion derivatives market. In addition, a council of regulators, headed by the Treasury secretary, would monitor the financial landscape for potential systemic risks.

"The finish line is in sight. The bill that has emerged from conference is strong," Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner said in a statement early Friday. "It will offer families the protections they deserve, help safeguard their financial security and give the businesses of American access to the credit they need to expand and innovate."

On the House side, the final tally was 20 to 11 to approve the conference committee's report. On the Senate side, it was 7 to 5. The votes fell along party lines, earning no support from Republicans on the two panels.

"This legislation is a failure on both counts," Sen. Judd Gregg (R-NH) said in a statement that denounced the compromise as failing to address "shoddy underwriting practices" or problems with the government-sponsored entities Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. "It will not encourage much-needed stability and confidence in our financial markets. It will not significantly reduce systemic risk in our financial sector."

The final and most arduous compromise began to fall into place just after midnight. Sen. Blanche Lincoln (D-Ark.) agreed to scale back a controversial provision that would have forced the nation's biggest banks to spin off their lucrative derivatives-dealing businesses.

Thursday evening, members of the House-Senate conference committee also reached accord on the "Volcker rule," named after former Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volcker. That measure would bar banks from trading with their own money, a practice known as proprietary trading.

Lincoln's provision had for months remained a particularly thorny issue for Democrats, causing internal divisions that threatened to derail the massive legislation.

While consumer advocates and many liberals supported her provision, it encountered stiff opposition from the Obama administration and some regulators, as well as from an influential bloc of moderate Democrats and House Democrats from New York, where much of the financial derivatives industry is concentrated.

Administration officials and Democratic leaders worked fervently Thursday to bridge the divide between Lincoln and those House Democrats. Top Treasury officials, including Deputy Secretary Neal Wolin and Michael Barr, an assistant secretary, roamed the Dirksen office building alongside White House economic adviser Diana Farrell, conferring with aides and key lawmakers. Gary Gensler, chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, worked the committee room throughout the day.

Lincoln came and went from the hearing room Thursday, meeting with members of the centrist New Democrat Coalition to try to find common ground and huddling with Dodd (D-Conn.); Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.), chairman of the House Financial Services Committee; and other lawmakers.

In the very early morning hours Friday, Rep. Collin Peterson (D-Minn.) -- chairman of the House Agriculture Committee and a Lincoln supporter -- introduced a proposal that would compel banks to spin off only their riskiest derivatives trades, including particular forms of credit-default swaps, which are complex financial bets that exacerbated the financial crisis.

At the same time, the proposal would allow banks to hold onto certain derivatives trading related to interest rates, currency rates, gold and silver. They also would be allowed to continue trading in derivatives in order to hedge against their own risks.

Under the compromise, the derivatives operations that firms spin out of their federally-insured banks could still be retained in a separately-capitalized affiliate. In addition, firms would have two years to institute the new rules.

The Senate agreed to the compromise language just after 2:30 a.m.

The cavernous Dirksen 106 conference room remained packed at that hour, but it was a chaotic and cluttered mass of humanity. Lawmakers had stopped trying to conceal their yawns. Aides who had worn down their BlackBerry batteries recharged them for the home stretch. Trash cans spilled over with coffee cups and sandwich wrappers. Empty Fritos bags and plastic Diet Coke bottles littered the room, along with reams of paper -- old amendments, new amendments, handwritten amendments, amendments to amendments.

"So much for the paperless society," Frank quipped at one point.

In reaching a deal on the Volcker rule, negotiators adopted a provision that mirrors language previously offered by Sens. Carl M. Levin (D-Mich.) and Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), which would ban certain forms of proprietary trading and forbid firms from betting against securities they sell to clients. The Merkley-Levin measure never got a vote on the Senate floor.

"One goal of these limits is to reduce participation in high-risk activity that can cause significant losses at institutions which are central to the financial system," Dodd said. "A second goal is to end the use of low-cost funds, to which insured depositories have access, from subsidizing high-risk activity."

Under the agreement, firms would have up to two years to scale back their proprietary trading and investments in hedge funds and private equity funds. Banks also would be barred from betting against their clients on certain investments deals.

Even as they worked to toughen the Volcker language, lawmakers agreed to an exemption at the behest of Sen. Scott Brown (R-Mass), one of only four Republicans to vote for an earlier version of the financial regulation bill in the Senate last month.

Brown, whose state is a hub of the asset-management industry, wanted the bill to allow banks to invest at least a small amount of capital in hedge funds and private equity investments. The measure would prohibit a banks from investing more than 3 percent of their capital in private equity or hedge funds. It was one of a number of provisions tailored to hold onto key votes as the bill heads toward final passage.

Lawmakers squared away a handful of other lingering issues late Thursday and early Friday.

They agreed to exempt the nation's 18,000 auto dealers from oversight by a new consumer financial protection watchdog, a striking legislative victory for one of the nation's most influential lobbying groups and a blow to consumer advocates and Democratic leaders who had long opposed such a loophole. "It is time for people like myself to concede that the votes are not there to give the consumer regulator any role in this," Frank said.

Lawmakers also voted to give shareholders more of a say on corporate governance, to place new restrictions on mortgage lending and to levy a risk-based assessment on large financial firms to help pay for the wide-ranging bill, which the Congressional Budget Office has estimated would cost nearly $20 billion over the next decade.

Weary lawmakers wrapped up their work just after sunrise, only hours before Obama was scheduled to head to Toronto for a meeting of global finance ministers and central bankers. Both Dodd and Frank said they hoped the passage of the legislation by their committees will help the United States lead the ongoing global effort to harmonize new financial safeguards.

"We've put in the hands of the president a very powerful set of tools for him to reassert American leadership in the world," Frank said.

One of the last motions Friday was to name the bill after the two chairmen, who had shepherded the legislation through the House and the Senate over the past year. At 5:07 a.m., they agreed unanimously that it would be known as the Dodd-Frank bill, and the sound of applause echoed down the empty hallways.



________________________ __________

the scumbags who brought us the present disaster are setting us up for a new one. 

Straw Man

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333 - this may be one area where you and I agree

this bill will probably do more harm than good and I think it doesn't even address the bond rating agencies which were the linchpin in this whole meltdown.

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I haven't followed this issue a great deal. 

What was the alternative plan the GOP put forth?  Was it better/worse than this plan?

Straw Man

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I haven't followed this issue a great deal.  

What was the alternative plan the GOP put forth?  Was it better/worse than this plan?

I think their alternative was tax cuts for fetuses and a day of prayer to fix the credit markets

dario73

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I think their alternative was tax cuts for fetus's and a day of prayer to fix the credit markets

Going by your ignorant comment, it seems like you haven't been following this issue either.

That bill was developed by senators in BOTH parties, but is still not a good legislation.

At one point, the following was the GOP alternative:
 
ORDERLY LIQUIDATION

No resolution fund. Three-part procedure for triggering new a process to dismantle large financial firms in distress.

1) Federal Reserve Board and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp board must make recommendation on whether FDIC should be appointed receiver for troubled firm.

2) Treasury Secretary and U.S. president must determine that resolving firm would safeguard U.S. financial stability.

3) Treasury Secretary would file petition in court for an order authorizing secretary to appoint FDIC as receiver.

FDIC would have to decide to resolve firm by liquidation or winding down company, or by transferring company's assets and liabilities to a bridge bank and liquidating remaining assets.

The FDIC has flexibility to advance funds to creditors, but would have to recoup any amount the creditor received in excess of what it would have received in bankruptcy.

FDIC banned from making equity investments in firm without Congressional approval.

FEDERAL RESERVE MEASURES

Restricts Fed's emergency lending authority to providing liquidity to solvent companies in short-term crises. Fed board, Treasury Secretary would have to approve measure. Fed actions accountable to Congress, public.

Would require Fed to draw clearer line between monetary and fiscal policy to preserve independence of Fed and ensure Fed does not choose winners and losers through credit allocation.

New York Fed president would become a political appointee. He is currently picked by the bank's board of directors subject to approval by the Fed Board of Governors in Washington.

CONSUMER PROTECTIONS

Creates a Council for Consumer Financial Protection made up of FDIC chairman, Comptroller of the Currency and Fed chairman. Council can write rules for consumer products and has powers to supervise and enforce rules for largest financial firms.

Council has backup enforcement authority over regional banks and credit unions, but small community banks and thrifts fall under purview of their respective bank regulator.

National bank regulators continue to preempt state laws.

SYSTEMIC RISK

Establishes a Treasury-led council of financial regulators to monitor financial stability and systemic risk, much like a similar proposal being made by Democrats.

The council would undertake stress tests of the financial system, ordering firms that fail to take remedial action. It would also rule on new capital, liquidity and leverage standards and promote cooperation among regulators.

OVER-THE-COUNTER DERIVATIVES

Requires clearing of some over-the-counter swaps, based on criteria established by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the Securities and Exchange Commission, but would not force trading of swaps onto exchanges.

Entities that use swaps to hedge risks would be exempt from clearing requirements. Major swaps users would have to register with regulators. All swaps trades would be publicly reported.

SEC REORGANIZATION

Reorganizes internal structure of SEC by creating several new agency divisions.

SARBANES-OXLEY

Immediately exempts corporations with less than $150 million in publicly floated equity from complying with Section 404 of 2002's post-Enron Sarbanes-Oxley reforms. The law required publicly held companies to get external reviews of their internal financial controls.

FANNIE MAE AND FREDDIE MAC

Limits further bailouts of Fannie and Freddie to $200 billion per institution. Requires the mortgage finance giants to reduce their portfolio holdings by 10 percent of the prior year's holdings.

President will be required to submit a plan to reform the mortgage finance giants to Congress no later than 6 months after the law is enacted.

Inspector general appointed to investigate Treasury Department's decisions made regarding the conservatorships of Fannie and Freddie.

INSURANCE

Similar to Democratic bill. Establishes Office of National Insurance within Treasury Department to monitor and study the insurance industry, but not regulate it.

Insurers are presently regulated by state-level authorities, not the federal government. The new office would also "coordinate international insurance regulation."

The summary says the Republican alternative also "streamlines the regulation of surplus lines and reinsurance." (Reporting by Ann Saphir, Rachelle Younglai, Kevin Drawbaugh, Kim Dixon; editing by Andre Grenon)


Straw Man

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Seems like you haven't been following this issue by your ignorant comment.

This bill was developed by senators in BOTH parties, but is still not a good legislation.


I already said I thought the bill was bad (and have said it for a few months now)




Soul Crusher

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I will give Straw credit in that he has been against this from Day 1. 

dario73

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I already said I thought the bill was bad (and have said it for a few months now)





My response was to this: "I think their alternative was tax cuts for fetuses and a day of prayer to fix the credit markets."

We get it. You are an atheist. Do you want a dog biscuit as a prize?

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Oh, I thought the dems shoved this down everyones throats.

This was a bipartisan effort?

Soul Crusher

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Oh, I thought the dems shoved this down everyones throats.

This was a bipartisan effort?

This thing was done in the middle of the night, no transparency, nothing.

Typical Mugabe tactics. 

240 is Back

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This thing was done in the middle of the night, no transparency, nothing.

Typical Mugabe tactics. 

I dont know what that means.  I see a bill that was worked on using bipartisan means.  These people were fairly elected to decide these things.  Can you show us how the will of the people under our existing system was circumvented in any way here?

If anything, it's the system you want to put on trial, right?

Soul Crusher

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I dont know what that means.  I see a bill that was worked on using bipartisan means.  These people were fairly elected to decide these things.  Can you show us how the will of the people under our existing system was circumvented in any way here?

If anything, it's the system you want to put on trial, right?

Bro - your inane bs is getting worse by the hour. 

240 is Back

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Bro - your inane bs is getting worse by the hour. 

hey, the bill looks like a bag of shit to me too.  I dont think anyone here is saying "woah, awesome bill, broski!"

And i agree it's very odd to pass something when you can't state the results.  Politically, it does insulate them from "Obama promised 4.5 mil jobs in 18 months... if it's only 4.49 mil jobs, then it's a complete failure!"

They learned from Dubya, who was MUCH less precise with his fluid benchmarks and measurements for success.  Maybe the bipartisan aspect was the Repubs bringing in the moving goalposts, which barney beans n Frank was happy to accept.

Soul Crusher

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hey, the bill looks like a bag of shit to me too.  I dont think anyone here is saying "woah, awesome bill, broski!"

And i agree it's very odd to pass something when you can't state the results.  Politically, it does insulate them from "Obama promised 4.5 mil jobs in 18 months... if it's only 4.49 mil jobs, then it's a complete failure!"

They learned from Dubya, who was MUCH less precise with his fluid benchmarks and measurements for success.  Maybe the bipartisan aspect was the Repubs bringing in the moving goalposts, which barney beans n Frank was happy to accept.

 ::)  ::)

We are only two months away from that benchmark set by your hero and 4.49 million jobs will not have been created. 

240 is Back

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::)  ::)

We are only two months away from that benchmark set by your hero and 4.49 million jobs will not have been created. 

But until you can tell me exactlyt what number is the cutoff for success/failure, I cannot make a determination.

He created somewhere between 1 job and 4,999,999 jobs.  How do we know how many were created, and what number in that range do you consider a success?

Soul Crusher

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But until you can tell me exactlyt what number is the cutoff for success/failure, I cannot make a determination.

He created somewhere between 1 job and 4,999,999 jobs.  How do we know how many were created, and what number in that range do you consider a success?

None because he spent 1 Trillion dollars of debt fiancing to produce what can only be considered a financial disaster considering no jobs in the private sector were created, and most were temp bs govt make work jobs. 

12secGT

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You want a GOOD plan??

1) kick out those currently in the house and senate who TOOK part in this mess. This may include the annointed one himself.
2) Jail those on Wallstreet who knew that by packaging MBS's, give them BS AAA ratings and sell them to unsuspecting investors would collapse the econ as we know it.
3) Put regulations (NOT RESTRICTIONS AND TAXES) on investiments such as this.
4) Do not tax businesses like crazy, AKA the way Obama wants to...
5) Tax breaks for jobs created.
6) Be sure that if you want a loan to buy a home, you have to PROVE your income.
7) See the first 6.
8) :D

Straw Man

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My response was to this: "I think their alternative was tax cuts for fetuses and a day of prayer to fix the credit markets."

We get it. You are an atheist. Do you want a dog biscuit as a prize?

I'm not technically an atheist (I've said that many times too) and it's a fucking joke

BM OUT

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And i agree it's very odd to pass something when you can't state the results.  Politically, it does insulate them from "Obama promised 4.5 mil jobs in 18 months... if it's only 4.49 mil jobs, then it's a complete failure!"

The number is ZERO!!!Temp jobs dont count and saved jobs is a made up statistic.According to Biden its 2.3 million to 2.5 million created or saved jobs.Since there is no such a statistic as saved jobs,the number is zero.Totally made up by the goverenment.Much like Salazar totally made up the experts agreeing on the moritorium on drilling.

Now,here is what we know for sure.Since the stimulus passed we LOST 4 million jobs.Since the stimulus passed GDP is miniscule and just got revised last month to 2.7%.After spending 700 billion Id say a blind man in a graveyard at midnight can see Obamas stimulus is the most spectacular failure in legislative history.

dario73

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But until you can tell me exactlyt what number is the cutoff for success/failure, I cannot make a determination.

He created somewhere between 1 job and 4,999,999 jobs.  How do we know how many were created, and what number in that range do you consider a success?

Another proof that Obama's stimulus did not work is the unemployment level. Didn't the Dems claim that it needed to be passed because it would keep unemployment under 8%? Where is it now?

And isn't it strange that the Obama administration claim so many jobs have been created, yet unemployment is still over 9%? I believe it is over 10% and it will probably be even higher once those temp jobs go away.

Billy is right. 0 jobs were created. Obama's stim is a failure.

Soul Crusher

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Good article:
________________________ __________

Grading Financial Regulatory Reform

By Barry Ritholtz - June 25th, 2010, 12:16PM

This morning, we learned of a huge compromise in regulatory reform. The expectation was that no one was happy with the bill, but the politicians, who all get to go home to the voters and say “Well, at least we passed something.”

Overall, I give this a C minus: There are simply too many Fs to give them a much higher grade. Let’s look at what was passed and grade each section of reform:

TOO BIG TO FAIL:  Grade: F

The new regulation does not directly address either the repeal of Glass Steagall or TBTF. The crisis legacy is a financial services sector that is highly concentrated with dramatically reduced competition. The six largest financial firms — combined assets: $9.4 trillion — will still dominate the industry.  Too-Big-to-Fail remains the law of the land.

MORTGAGE UNDERWRITING STANDARDS: Grade A

Establishes new minimum underwriting standards for mortgages. No more no doc, NINJA, or Liar loans. Lenders must verify income, credit history and job status. Would ban payments to brokers for steering borrowers to high-priced loans. Of all the regulatory changes passed today, this seems to be the only one that, if in place a decade ago, would have prevented (or at least dramatically reduced) the crisis.

NEW REGULATORY AUTHORITY:  Grade:  C+

Gives federal regulators new authority to seize and break up large troubled financial firms without taxpayer bailouts; creates a sector rescue fund from banks with > $50B in assets. The time to assess this fee is before a crisis, not after — when banks need every penny of capital.

LEVERAGE:  Grade: F

Inexplicably, all of the new regulations fail to reduce leverage rules today .

FINANCIAL STABILITY COUNCIL:  Grade:  B-

10-member Financial Stability Oversight Council to address system-wide risks to stability, with the power to break up financial firms.  Oh, and about that leverage thingie? Directs them to look into it.

Question: Why not address leverage NOW, instead of kicking it down the road? Is Congress really THAT cowardly?

CREDIT RATING AGENCIES: Grade:  F

Sets up a quasi-government entity to address conflicts of interest. Allow investors to sue credit-rating agencies. Establishes new SEC oversight office. Retains Oligopoly; Fails to open ratings to more competition. Considering that the ratings agencies were the prime enablers of the crisis, this failure is shameful.

DERIVATIVES:  Grade B+

Moves most derivatives to exchanges, routed through clearinghouses,e etc.  Customized swaps remain OTC, but have reporting requirements. New capital, margin, reporting, record-keeping and business conduct rules for firms that deal in derivatives. Failed to overturn CFMA.

VOLCKER RULE: Grade A-

Curbs propriety trading by FDIC insured depository institution. Would not have rpevented this crisis, but addresses the moral hazard of banks in the future due to the bailout.

CORPORATE PAY: Grade F

Give shareholders a non-binding vote on executive pay. No clawback provisions. Does not address imposing liability on management for excess risk taking, corporate collapse or taxpayers bailouts.

FEDERAL PRE-EMPTION OF STATE BANKING RULES: Grade C+

Overturns OCC tool John Dugan Federal pre-emption of state regulations. states to impose their own stricter consumer protection laws on national banks. National banks can seek, and will likely receive exemptions from state laws, undercutting this entire law.

DEPOSIT INSURANCE: Grade B-

Permanently increases FDIC for banks, thrifts and credit unions to $250,000. Fly int he ointment: Congress failed to fund this, although the FDIC will be covered by taxpayers if and when they run out of cash . . .

CONSUMER AGENCY: Grade D+

The new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is a half decent idea, but the exemption for Auto Dealers — the typical family’s 2nd biggest purchase is a car — is unconscionable.  Putting the agency inside the Federal Reserve is beyond idiotic.

GigantorX

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Dodd will be a lobbyist for one of the many TBTF entities after he retires from Congress.

Book it. This failure of a bill that doesn't address the CAUSES of the crisis is his audition for Goldman Sachs.

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Dodd will be a lobbyist for one of the many TBTF entities after he retires from Congress.

Book it. This failure of a bill that doesn't address the CAUSES of the crisis is his audition for Goldman Sachs.

It didnt even address Fanny Freddy! 

Yet, the dorks like Danny & Blacken, Madcow, Benny, et al are just happy to see Obama sign anything, regardless of the shit sandwich it is. 

Soul Crusher

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Great clip as always. 


Soul Crusher

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wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwtttttttt tttfffffffffffffffffffff ffffff????????????????????????????

________________________ ________________________ ____



July 8, 2010
Gender Quotas In the Financial Sector?
By Diana Furchtgott-Roth

www.realclearmarkets.com

________________________ ________________________ __



WASHINGTON - What one finds when reading congressional legislation is invariably surprising. Take the Dodd-Frank financial regulation bill, for instance, which was created by merging Senate and House bills. When the Senate returns from recess one of its first actions will be to vote on the bill, which passed the House on June 30.

I was searching the bill for a provision about derivatives. What did I find but Section 342, which declares that race and gender employment ratios, if not quotas, must be observed by private financial institutions that do business with the government. In a major power grab, the new law inserts race and gender quotas into America's financial industry.

In addition to this bill's well-publicized plans to establish over a dozen new financial regulatory offices, Section 342 sets up at least 20 Offices of Minority and Women Inclusion. This has had no coverage by the news media and has large implications.

The Treasury, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the 12 Federal Reserve regional banks, the Board of Governors of the Fed, the National Credit Union Administration, the Comptroller of the Currency, the Securities and Exchange Commission, the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau...all would get their own Office of Minority and Women Inclusion.

Each office would have its own director and staff to develop policies promoting equal employment opportunities and racial, ethnic, and gender diversity of not just the agency's workforce, but also the workforces of its contractors and sub-contractors.

What would be the mission of this new corps of Federal monitors? The Dodd-Frank bill sets it forth succinctly and simply - all too simply. The mission, it says, is to assure "to the maximum extent possible the fair inclusion" of women and minorities, individually and through businesses they own, in the activities of the agencies, including contracting.

How to define "fair" has bedeviled government administrators, university admissions officers, private employers, union shop stewards and all other supervisors since time immemorial - or at least since Congress first undertook to prohibit discrimination in employment.

Sometimes, "fair" has been defined in relation to population numbers, for example, by the U.S. Department of Education in its enforcement of Title IX, passed in 1972 as an amendment to the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which pertains to varsity athletic opportunities for male and female undergraduates.

Title IX was intended to protect against sex discrimination, but not to allow the use of quotas. Indeed, it specifically prohibited arbitrary leveling of student numbers by gender.

Yet in 1997 the courts essentially sided with an interpretation of the law promulgated by the Department of Education that left universities with no choice but to adopt a proportionality standard for college sports if they wished to avoid lawsuits. If 55% of the students are female, then 55% of the varsity sports slots have to go to women. Financial institutions might have to meet a similar proportionality standard.

Lest there be any narrow interpretation of Congress's intent, either by agencies or eventually by the courts, the bill specifies that the "fair" employment test shall apply to "financial institutions, investment banking firms, mortgage banking firms, asset management firms, brokers, dealers, financial services entities, underwriters, accountants, investment consultants and providers of legal services." That last would appear to rope in law firms working for financial entities.

Contracts are defined expansively as "all contracts for business and activities of an agency, at all levels, including contracts for the issuance or guarantee of any debt, equity, or security, the sale of assets, the management of the assets of the agency, the making of equity investments by the agency, and the implementation by the agency of programs to address economic recovery."

This latest attempt by Congress to dictate what "fair" employment means is likely to encourage administrators and managers, in government and in the private sector, to hire women and minorities for the sake of appearances, even if some new hires are less qualified than other applicants. The result is likely to be redundant hiring and a wasteful expansion of payroll overhead.

If the director decides that a contractor has not made a good-faith effort to include women and minorities in its workforce, he is required to contact the agency administrator and recommend that the contractor be terminated.

Section 342's provisions are broad and vague, and are certain to increase inefficiency in federal agencies. To comply, federal agencies are likely to find it easier to employ and contract with less-qualified women and minorities, merely in order to avoid regulatory trouble. This would in turn decrease the agencies' efficiency, productivity and output, while increasing their costs.

Setting up these Offices of Minority and Women Inclusion is a troubling indictment of current law. Women and minorities have an ample range of legal avenues already to ensure that businesses engage in nondiscriminatory practices. By creating these new offices, Congress does not believe that existing law is sufficient.

Cabinet-level departments already have individual Offices of Civil Rights and Diversity. In addition, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the Labor Department's Office of Federal Contract Compliance are charged with enforcing racial and gender discrimination laws.

With the new financial regulation law, the federal government is moving from outlawing discrimination to setting up a system of quotas. Ultimately, the only way that financial firms doing business with the government would be able to comply with the law is by showing that a certain percentage of their workforce is female or minority.

The new Offices of Women and Minorities represent a major change in employment law by imposing gender and racial quotas on the financial industry. The issue deserves careful debate - rather than a few pages slipped into the financial regulation bill.

 

Diana Furchtgott-Roth is a