Saturday, April 24, 2010

Obama: Wall St. reform will ‘end’ taxpayer bailouts

...until next time because we're so shortsighted regarding the economy, we haven't recognized the credit and commercial real estate crashes, both of which are imminent. Sorry, I don't buy it.


Obama: Wall St. reform will ‘end’ taxpayer bailouts
Saturday, April 24th, 2010

President Barack Obama renewed his push for Wall Street reform Saturday, saying the country needed to tackle the underlying problems that caused the economic crisis and promising new regulations would "put an end, once and for all, to taxpayer bailouts."

"The economy is on a better footing. But people are still hurting," Obama said in his weekly radio address. "No matter what the economic statistics say, I won't be satisfied until folks who need work can find good jobs."

The president noted that the main causes of the economic downturn were problems in the US financial sector, and Wall Street firms had taken "enormous, irresponsible risks" that hurt practically every sector of the economy.

Obama is promising the most sweeping regulatory reform drive since the 1930s Great Depression, and is seeking to build momentum for efforts by Democrats in Congress to overcome Republican opposition and pass a new Wall Street reform law.

That effort got a boost on Wednesday, when a Senate panel approved new restrictions on derivatives, the shadowy financial instruments blamed in part for igniting the financial meltdown from which America is just emerging.

The Senate Agriculture Committee voted 13-8 to impose new rules on trading in derivatives, with just one Republican joining Democrats.

Republican leaders have so far united in opposition to the bill to impose tougher regulations on banks and finance firms and to frame a new consumer financial protection agency.

They say Obama's reforms would introduce the heavy hand of government deeper into the US free enterprise system and would lead to a culture of financial bailouts, an accusation Democrats say is false.

But Obama said the reforms would put an end to taxpayer bailouts of big financial institutions and bring greater transparency to complex financial dealings.

"Folks will get clearer and more concise information when they make financial decisions - instead of having to worry about deceptive fine print," he pointed out. "And shareholders and pension holders will have a stronger voice in the boardrooms of companies in which they invest their savings."

The president noted that the proposed reform will help "to put an end to the cycle of boom and bust that we've seen" and not only revive the economy, but help to rebuild it stronger than ever before.

This video was published by the White House on Saturday, April 24, 2010.

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