Saint Wrote:
Goldman Sachs, after the great financial debacle, is now a commercial bank, which can rely on too big to fail guarantees by the federal government and the FDIC, and is also an investment bank. Glass-Steagall was not recodified in the new legislation, sadly.
Goldman Sachs could rely on too big to fail guarantees even before they converted to a commercial bank. Most of the banks that were in the worst shape (other than Citibank) were ones that had no or small depository bases. How would we have been better off if Glass Steagall had been in place and BOFA had not been able to buy Merrill Lynch? Do you think that the feds would have really let ML fail or that the country would have been better off if it did? The repeal of Glass Steagall had nothing (REPEAT NOTHING) to do with the crisis.
I'm not against finreg reform. I think some derivatives regulation is necessary. This is terrible legislation though. For example, it doesn't even address Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac -- two of the biggest fails out there and the ones in most need of reform. They are still out there guaranteeing loans with miniscule deposits putting taxpayers at increasing risk.
As far as Too Big to Fail goes, in theory there are things that they could do to make it easier to deal with failed finanancial institutions through a bankruptcy process but its very complicated and I have little confidence that anyone would get it right especially with the global nature of these firms and all of the unforeseen repurcussions in other markets when Lehman failed. The problem in thinking that anyone is really going to deal with too big to fail is that this big financial institutions generally get in trouble together not in isolation. I just don't see any political leaders having the will to let a bunch of big banks fail. Its kind of like the national debt limit. Just political bs.
As far as the original topic goes, anyone watch Meet the Press on Sunday? This current batch of repug leaders are terrible. They really are risking squandering a golden opportunity to pick up seats. No one was offering any ideas at all for what they would do differently.