http://www.alternet.org/robert-reich-wall-street-hard-work-cooking-next-financial-collapse
The American middle class needs stronger bank regulations, not weaker ones.
Last summer, bank regulators told the big banks their plans for orderly bankruptcies were “unrealistic.” In other words, if the banks collapsed, they’d bring the economy down with them.
Dodd-Frank doesn’t even cover bank bets on foreign exchanges. Yet recent turbulence in the foreign exchange market has causedhuge losses at hedge funds and brokerages.
This comes on top of revelations of widespread manipulation by the big banks of the foreign-exchange market.
Wall Street is also awash in inside information unavailable to average investors.
Just weeks ago a three- judge panel of the U.S. court of appeals that oversees Wall Street reversed an
insider-trading conviction, saying guilt requires proof a trader knows
the tip was leaked in exchange for some “personal benefit” that’s “of
some consequence.”
Meaning that if a CEO tells his Wall Street
golfing buddy about a pending merger, the buddy and his friends can make
a bundle — to the detriment of small, typically middle-class,
investors.
It’s nice that presidential aspirants are talking about rebuilding America’s middle class.
But to be credible, he (or she) has to take clear aim at the Street.
That
means proposing to limit the size of the biggest Wall Street banks;
resurrect the Glass-Steagall Act (which used to separate investment from
commercial banking); define insider trading the way most other
countries do – using information any reasonable person would know is
unavailable to most investors; and close the revolving door between the
Street and the U.S. Treasury.
It also means not depending on the Street to finance their campaigns.
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