Friday, October 31, 2008

"Lawmakers unhappy with the plan are finding they can do little else but jawbone banks to lend"

Barney Frank agrees with me. From the WSJ:

"Frank Says Banks Should Just Use Government Funds for Lending

House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank asserted that a number of financial firms were “distorting” the financial rescue legislation by not using government capital exclusively to boost lending.

[Barney Frank]
Frank
“Any use of these funds for any purpose other than lending — for bonuses, for severance pay, for dividends, for acquisitions of other institutions, etc. — is a violation of the terms of the Act,” Frank (D., Mass.) said in a statement Friday.





But this:

“Maybe if we’d have 13 weeks instead of 13 days we would’ve written that bill with even more detail,” Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd (D., Conn.) said Thursday."

Come on. I saw this problem from the very beginning on my blog.

"However, they aren’t required to shut off dividends to shareholders. And there are no requirements that banks use the funds to lend, rather than bolster their balance sheets or make acquisitions. Indeed, Treasury supports banks using the funds to buy weaker rivals.

Lawmakers unhappy with the plan are finding they can do little else but jawbone banks to lend. The financial rescue legislation that granted Treasury authority for the bank capital program says little about the use of any government funds, other than placing some curbs on executive pay.

The House Financial Services Committee will hold oversight hearings on Nov. 12 and Nov. 18 on TARP. Frank warned, “It is very important if congressional and public support for this program is to continue that we receive assurances at those hearings that the money being advanced will be used only for relending and for no other purpose.” –Jessica Holzer"

Good work Jessica. How well does jawboning work? Why pass laws when we can jawbone? Holy mackerel.

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