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Three Theories on Solving the 'Too Big to Fail' Problem

Wall Street Journal Original article ›

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Wessel summarizes the existing thinking of the administration and its critics on ways to prevent the next banking crisis. The Shultz-Mervyn King School which says breakup the largest banks into smaller banks so they are not too big to fail. The Volcker school which says separate utility banking from thre risk taking banking of the trading desks of investment banks. And the Geithner-Frank school of avoiding these tough choices in the face of intense lobbying by the banks by glossing over the problem, their latest proposal suggesting that Treasury collect the bill of abank bailout from the remaining weakened banks in afinancial crisis of the future. But the Geithner -Frank solution still has Treasury, meaning the government footing the bill, as collecting the bailout from remaining banks that are weak in such a financial crisis may not be feasible. and it would further worsen the government's finances, raising questions about these proposals which may amount to doing a little better than nothing. In effect avoiding the tough choices of breaking up the larger banks or separating utility banking from trading desks of investment banks.

Bank Cleanup Options of bad bank, guaranteeing assets, and nationalization reviewed in the 2008 financial crisis

01/17/2009

Economist, NYT and experts look at the options for cleaning up the bad debt at banks.

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RBS Nears Nationalization

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Grouped Articles

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Britain’s Top Financial Regulator Takes On Banks

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Bank of England governor Mervyn King sees the need to breakup the biggest banks.

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Volcker in the USA and Mervyn King in England both agree that speculative and utility banking should be separated, and too big to fail banks broken up. Regulation to prevent a future banking crisis they agree is something of an illusion.

Grouped Articles

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Fed's Tarullo Shakes Up Bank Rules

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Danel Tarullo's lone effort at the Federal Reserve- 2009-2010

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Daniel Tarullo steps in around September 2009, when Congress and the administration have already buckled under pressure from the lobbying by the banking industry to weaken essential regulatory reform in derivatives trading, and in other reforms. Volcker is 82, and rarely uses his Washington office (ignored?), Tarullo is looked at by staff at the Fed from the previous lax regime of regulation with skepticism. Mervyn King at the Bank of England is alone in calling for the breakup of big banks into smaller banks, and separating utility and investment banking, which Volcker supports. As it stands now bank regulation falls under the FSA in England, with the Conservatives under Osborne looking to give the Bank of England this authority. And all the time banking behaviours at investment banks and trading desks continue in a business as usual manner.

Grouped Articles

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Banks Ordered to Add Capital to Limit Risks

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Fed’s New Bank-Regulation Tune Should Be One Direction

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Washington Strips New York Fed’s Power

Wall Street Journal 03/05/2015

U.K. Banks Face Political Upheaval

Wall Street Journal 10/27/2009


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