Members of Government Bank Regulatory Agencies, OCC and OTS Got Big Bonuses

Matt Apuzzo, Huffington Post

Banks weren’t the only ones giving big bonuses in the boom years before the worst financial crisis in generations. The government also was handing out millions of dollars to bank regulators, rewarding “superior” work even as an avalanche of risky mortgages helped create the meltdown.

The payments, detailed in payroll data released to The Associated Press under the Freedom of Information Act, are the latest evidence of the government’s false sense of security during the go-go days of the financial boom. Just as bank executives got bonuses despite taking on dangerous amounts of risk, regulators got taxpayer-funded bonuses despite missing or ignoring signs that the system was on the verge of a meltdown.

The bonuses were part of a reward program little known outside the government. Some government regulators got tens of thousands of dollars in perks, boosting their salaries by almost 25 percent. Often, though, rewards amounted to just a few hundred dollars for employees who came up with good ideas.

During the 2003-06 boom, the three agencies that supervise most U.S. banks – the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., the Office of Thrift Supervision and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency – gave out at least $19 million in bonuses, records show.

Nearly all that money was spent recognizing “superior” performance. The largest share, more than $8.4 million, went to financial examiners, those employees and managers who scrutinize internal bank documents and sound the first alarms. Analysts, auditors, economists and criminal investigators also got awards.

Read more here: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/03/18/government-bank-regulator-bonus_n_503712.html

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Government is Trying to Make Bailouts for the Giant Banks PERMANENT

On September 25th, I wrote:

Paul Volcker and senior Harvard economist Jeffrey Miron both testified to Congress this week that the government is trying to make bailouts for the giant banks permanent.

Writing Wednesday in The Hill, Congressman Brad Sherman pointed out that :

In my opinion, Geithner’s proposal is “TARP on steroids.” Section 1204 of the proposal [the proposal being the "Resolution Authority for Large, Interconnected Financial Companies Act of 2009"] allows the executive branch to use taxpayer money to make loans to, or invest in, the largest financial institutions to avoid a systemic risk to the economy.

Read more about permanent bank bailouts

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Ongoing Agony of the Banks

It is hardly surprising that GMAC is circling back to the government for a third helping of taxpayer money. GMAC is struggling under the double whammy of bad car loans and the fallout from its misguided foray into mortgage finance at the height of the housing bubble. After the government applied stress tests to the banks last May, it was the only big bank that could not raise the capital it was deemed to need.

Still, GMAC’s return to the public trough — where it expects to get up to $5.6 billion on top of the $12.5 billion it has received since December — should serve as a reminder that much of the American banking system is nowhere near where it needs to be despite hundreds of billions of dollars doled out by the Treasury.

If the federal government’s strategy to save the banks was meant to get them back into the business of lending to American consumers and businesses, it has not worked yet. Read more about the bank bailout

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Voices of Power: Elizabeth Warren

LOIS ROMANO: Welcome, Elizabeth Warren, Chairman of the Congressional Oversight Committee that is tasked with scrutinizing how the Treasury Department has spent $700 billion to shore up our failing financial institutions. Thanks for joining us today.

ELIZABETH WARREN: Oh, it’s a pleasure to be here.

ROMANO: So, the first thing I want to ask you is you are about to become a household name. You are-you are one of the heroines, you’re being described of, of Michael Moore’s new movie which derides capitalism and goes after our economic structures.

WARREN: Well, I’d have to say, you know, I did an interview with Michael Moore and now I’m just astonished. I never thought I would be in 9 million television commercials, so it’s been pretty amazing.

ROMANO: There’s a wonderful moment when he asks you where the $700 billion is, and you look at him and you say, “I don’t know.” So the question is: why don’t you know?

WARREN: Well, we don’t know where the $700 billion is because the system was initially designed to make sure that we didn’t know. Read more about Elizabeth Warren

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