Saturday, October 3, 2015

The Misunderstood Glass-Steagall Act

                                                 
The Dodd-Frank legislation of 2010 supposedly was enacted, among its many intentions, to prevent big banks from failing. To do so, it helped impose rules on banks against trading for their own accounts; the Volcker Rules, after Paul Volcker, a former Chairman of the Federal Reserve.
                       
The Glass-Steagall Act, preventing commercial banks from being in the investment banking business, had been around under the Banking Act of 1934 until it was terminated during the Clinton administration.
                       
A similar law could probably have been passed, without all the talk that casts gloom over industry and finance and sees to it that we remain in a deep economic funk. Right now, commercial banks have spun off trading activities for their own accounts but it’s difficult to distinguish activities done on behalf of clients.
                       
The upshot has been confusion and bigger banks than ever because Dodd-Frank is murder on smaller banks. The bigger than ever banks
will continue to be too big to fail. (See the Earl J. Weinreb NewsHole® comments and @BusinessNewshole at Twitter.)

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