Townhall...
The
Beltway Industry Full-Time
Employment Act
By Michelle Malkin
7/22/2011
Dodd-Frank,
the 2,300-page financial
“reform” monstrosity spearheaded by Capitol Hill corruptocrats, turned
1 this
week. It made too-big banks bigger. It made too-risky incentives
riskier. It
made a lousy economy lousier. Billed as a “consumer protection” act,
Dodd-Frank
has succeeded phenomenally -- in protecting and stimulating the
business-stifling business of government.
Dodd-Frank
is a tyrannical triumph of
rule-makers, lobbyists and other non-elected spongers over taxpayers.
If you
don’t want an unseemly glimpse into the self-serving, sausage-making
process
that feeds the insatiable Beltway industry, read no further. The law’s
implementation
process is so far-reaching and Byzantine that every member of Congress
should
be suffering migraines from it.
Quite
expectedly, the feds have met a
scant 12 percent of rule-making requirements dictated by the
grandstanding
Dodd-Frank law as of July 1. According to legal and regulatory
watchdogs Davis
Polk and Wardwell, regulators missed 131 deadlines over the past year.
Moreover, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the U.S.
Commodities and
Futures Trading Commission have been granting “temporary relief”
deferrals (de
facto waivers a la Obamacare) left and right to targets in the swaps
industry.
Here
is just a brief sample of
“upcoming activity” on Dodd-Frank (with many rule-making deadlines
still to be
determined) published on the Securities and Exchange Commission website:
Section
342: Create and staff Office
of Minority and Women Inclusion (pending reprogramming approval by
appropriators)
Section
911: Create new Investor
Advisory Committee (pending appointment of Investor Advocate)
Sections
915 and 919D: Create and
staff Office of Investor Advocate (pending reprogramming approval by
appropriators)
Section
919: Issue rules, as the
Commission deems appropriate, designating documents or information that
must be
provided by a broker or dealer to a retail investor before the purchase
of an
investment product or service
Section
921: Issue rules, as the
Commission deems appropriate, addressing agreements that require
customers or
clients of any broker, dealer or investment adviser to arbitrate
disputes
arising under the Federal securities laws
Section
932: Create and staff Office
of Credit Ratings (pending reprogramming approval by appropriators)
Section
979: Create and staff Office
of Municipal Securities (pending reprogramming approval by
appropriators)
Section
967: Report to Congress
describing actions to implement the regulatory and administrative
recommendations contained in the independent consultant’s report on the
SEC’s
organization.
Now
multiply that language by more
than 400 rules total and tens of thousands of pages, scores of lobbying
firms
and legions of lawyers.
While
disastrous bailout behemoths
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac get off scot-free, small businesses, small
community
banks and small broker-dealers have been hit hard by the vagueness,
uncertainty
and cost burdens created by the Dodd-Frank-enstein monster. Meanwhile,
the
Government Accountability Office estimates that the feds will need
$1.25
billion for 11 different agencies to fund the rule-making racket by
2012 -- including
$481 million for the newly created Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
Co-father
Barney Frank bragged that
his freakishly ineffective creation is “holding up well” in public
opinion on
its first birthday. But that’s because public opinion is shaped by
vague, Wall
Street-bashing sound bites instead of hard-nosed assessments of the
law’s
impotence-by-design.
In
its analysis of the few rules that
have been finalized, law firm Morrison and Foerster LLP -- quoted in
the
financial adviser publication Investment News -- concluded that
Dodd-Frank
regulations “do not address or resolve the core systemic risk issues in
the
act.” Moreover, “with elections coming up, and with international
reform
measures dragging along, one cannot help but wonder how, when or even
if many
of the act’s reforms will be put in place.”
As
they say in the software industry,
the government budget-lining bureaucratic delays are not bugs. They’re
features
of yet another Beltway Industry Full-Time Employment Act.
Read
it at Townhall
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