"This is worth underlining. Even if the OCC, the FDIC, the Fed, and the OTS had miraculously managed to come to unanimous agreement on curtailing subprime lending, it still wouldn't have helped much -- because between them, they only had regulatory control over banks. Any subprime lenders which didn't take deposits -- and there were hundreds of them cropping up all over the country, originating loans and selling them on to investment banks to be packaged into bonds -- would have remained outside the regulatory reach.
In other words, without major regulatory consolidation, nothing effective was going to happen in any event. There's a general consensus in Washington now that we need a super-regulator with teeth, and the US might be able to learn from the UK's lessons in setting up the FSA. Once we have that, doing things like clamping down on subprime lending might become a great deal easier."
This is extremely important. Regulations need to be simple and easily enforced. This tangled web of regulations and regulators is, among other things, a breeding ground of lobbying and regulator shopping, as well as of confusion and legal complexity. We need to rationalize many of these agencies, and, just as I wrote that , I became very weary. What's the point?
Here's my comment, for what it's worth:
The shocking thing in that story was the ignorance and negligence of the industry representatives quoted, who assured everyone that everything was coming up roses. Too bad that they didn't warn us that they meant a thicket of thorns were included.
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