Hold On A Second! Parsing TARP: Frank's Reform Versus Dorgan's

by: Drum Major Institute

Wed Jan 21, 2009 at 19:20


As the House engaged in a bit of theatrics designed to show the Obama administration it was serious about TARP reform, the Senate now seems to be reconsidering its carte blanche release of the second $350 billion.  But the Frank TARP reform bill addresses substantially more issues of concern to TARP critics than does the Dorgan legislation (still in committee with no cosponsors).  

Perhaps most importantly, the Frank bill (H.R.384) prevents any funds from being made available unless between $40 billion and $100 billion are committed to a foreclosure prevention plan.  The legislation calls for creation of FDIC's popular and oft-cited loss-sharing foreclosure mitigation program that would prevent an estimated 1.5 million foreclosures.  Problems exist with the effort, as noted below, but the truth remains that 0$ of the first $350 billion were spent on foreclosure mitigation.  The Dorgan bill (S.195) omits all foreclosure provisions.  Is this any way to ensure that a foreclosure mitigation plan will actually be administered?  

Though the conditions included in each bill for receiving TARP funds - agreements laying out how the funds will be used - are similar, Frank's provisions are stronger.  Frank's bill prevents the use of TARP funds for M&As without certification that the action will reduce taxpayer risk or could have occurred without taxpayer money.   Frank's legislation requires reports on lending increases attributable to TARP where the Dorgan bill requires only "a detailed monthly report about how emergency economic assistance...is being used..."  This Dorgan provision leaves "the intended objectives and goals of [emergency economic] assistance" undefined, while the Frank legislation requires Treasury to establish "benchmarks" in its agreements with firms receiving TARP assistance.  

Drum Major Institute :: Hold On A Second! Parsing TARP: Frank's Reform Versus Dorgan's
Further, the Frank bills clarifies that the auto industry is eligible for TARP funds and makes the the increase in FDIC insurance permanent.  Dorgan's concept of a Taxpayer Protection Prosecution Task Force sounds great, but two new commissions (the bill also creates a commission to investigate "how the economic crisis happened") doesn't seem to relate to our goal of increasing accountability for how the next $350 billion in taxpayer funds are used.

The efforts taken by Frank and Dorgan to increase TARP oversight are welcome.  But both measures lack sufficient accountability because they lack sanctions for nonperformance (this is why Frank's provision withholding any TARP money in the absence of a foreclosure prevention plan 30% of its total size is so attractive).

TARP reform should meet two broad criteria: it should prevent foreclosures and it should include oversight measures that hold financial institutions, Congress, and the administration accountable for achieving, first, foreclosure mitigation and, second, financial stability.  If a financial institution does not use TARP funds appropriately, Treasury should be obliged to revoke any financial assistance made to the firm.  

The first $350 billion in TARP funds were authorized in part with promises of efforts at foreclosure prevention but none of the money was used for this purpose.  Without accountability measures, why should we expect the second $350 billion to be spent on such efforts?


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horrible (0.00 / 0)
all this is mish mash bla bla bla meant to placate partisans, while tax payers would still be bailing out those who should not have given or taken loans.

debt for equity is the only thing that makes any sense. cram down on financial institutions equity and bond holders, let homes go into foreclosure.

well meaning groups like DMI constantly ignore that there are tens of millions of people who can not currently afford a home, but could if the housing market were allowed to adjust to more reasonable affordability levels. DMI wants to complain about lack of affordable housing, but ignores that homes are not affordable because the federal government repeatedly tries to keep the bubble inflated. enough. let the bad debt default. no tax payer dollars for any bailouts.

~* the * Will * to go on *~


How will this work? (0.00 / 0)
Perhaps most importantly, the Frank bill (H.R.384) prevents any funds from being made available unless between $40 billion and $100 billion are committed to a foreclosure prevention plan.

How do we square that with the news that funds from the second tranche have already been obligated to Bank of America and committed to the auto bailout?

Suppose the Senate were to pass H.R. 384, but by the time they did, the vast majority (or even all) of the second $350 billion had been disbursed?







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