Dodd-Frank revisited


A headline in yesterday’s Wall Street Journal had me wondering whether their proofreader had missed an extra comma:

Wall Street, Banks Press to Shape Dodd-Frank Rules

The article reports recently disclosed figures on financial industry lobbying. Since the Dodd-Frank law left so much for regulators to spell out, the numbers are not surprising:

Wall Street and the financial industry spent more to lobby Washington in the first quarter of this year than a year ago when Congress was writing sweeping financial-overhaul legislation, according to a Wall Street Journal review of lobbying reports released Thursday.

The disclosures show that 26 of the financial firms and trade associations that spent the most in 2010 collectively spent $27 million in the three months ending March 31, a 2.7% increase from the $26.3 million spent in the comparable period in 2010.

The industry’s first-quarter lobbying tally is its second-highest ever, according to an analysis of data provided by the Center for Responsive Politics.   …

 

 

 

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend

One Response to “Dodd-Frank revisited”


     

     

    Leave a Reply

    Name (required)

    #OccupyBoston #OccupyWallStreet Alejandro Reuss Arjun Jayadev Arthur MacEwan ASSA austerity banking regulation Bank of America Boeing climate change David Graeber Dean Baker debt deficit deficits economics profession Egypt financial regulation foreclosures Gar Alperovitz Goldman Sachs Greece Hosni Mubarak inequality interest-rate swaps Jeannette Wicks-Lim John Miller Mark Engler Naked Capitalism Paul Krugman police brutality Polly Cleveland public-sector workers QE2 Rick Wolff Social Security taxes the Fed unemployment unions uprising Wikileaks William K. Black Wisconsin
    UA-3370877-1