Who Would Have Thought!
The Finance Regulation
law passed in the first Obama Administration has had one great effect, it
created Senator Elizabeth Warren. Ms. Warren was slated to head the Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau when her candidacy was blocked by Republicans. As a result Ms. Warren ran for and was
elected to the United States Senate, defeating a Republican incumbent, where she will serve on the committee that
regulates banks. Yeah, we’re still
smiling.
Photograph by Tom Williams/Getty Images
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A second benefit of
the law is that the new consumer protection agency may
actually start protecting consumers.
In the
year and a half since opening its doors, the Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau has hired more than 1,000 staffers, collected 90,000 consumer
complaints, and begun supervising many of the 153 banks under its authority.
The fledgling agency—a product of the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial
overhaul—released its most ambitious new policy on Jan. 10: a set of rules that
will shape the future of mortgage lending. “They have had a monumental impact
for an agency that has only really been operational for a year,” says Alan
Kaplinsky, an attorney at Ballard Spahr who represents companies on matters
before the bureau.
And no, despite Republican alarmist worries the agency does
not appear to be turning into a regulatory monster. Here’s what one opponent says
the CFPB hasn’t
been the one-sided force the industry feared. “They are not reflexively doing
everything they can to help consumers and screw the industry,” says Kaplinsky.
After an industry outcry, the bureau amended disclosure requirements for
international wire transfers and delayed the rule’s implementation.
But the best news of all, the Bureau’s next targets.
Says
Cordray: “We are really looking forward to getting through the mortgage rules
so we can start to take on other issues.” Payday lenders, prepaid card
providers, and banks that charge overdraft fees: You’re among the groups up
next.
Effective regulation here will help the most
vulnerable of the population and actually protect and promote those companies whose practices are ethical and honest. No wonder
Conservatives are so upset at the prospects.
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