Financial reform strikes a blow for regular consumers

Rep. James Oberstar, D-Minn.
House Transportation and Infrastructure Chairman Rep. James Oberstar, D-Minn. speaks during a news conference on Capitol Hill March 7, 2008 in Washington, D.C.
Photo by Brendan Smialowski/Getty Images

For months now, big Wall Street banks and investment firms have been spending more than a million dollars every day to employ an army of lobbyists to do one thing: Stop Congress from holding them accountable for the financial meltdown that cost 8 million American jobs and caused $17 trillion of wealth to simply vanish.

However, with the final passage of the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act last week, Congress scored a major victory for Americans against the predatory lenders, unscrupulous credit card companies and Wall Street brokers who caused the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.

The law enacts tough, common-sense reforms that protect consumers and end the era of "too big to fail." It creates a new Consumer Financial Protection Agency to protect families and small businesses by ensuring that bank loans, mortgages and credit cards are fair, affordable, understandable and transparent.

Unscrupulous practices by credit card companies -- like arbitrarily adding fees and raising interest rates -- are now banned. They will no longer be allowed to send you a bill a day before it is due and then charge a late fee.

Federal regulators now have the authority to seize and dismantle large banks and brokerage firms before they threaten the financial health of the nation. Taxpayers will never again be asked to pay for the reckless behavior of big bankers and Wall Street CEOs.

Other reforms will ensure that Wall Street does not gamble with your money. Complex financial products like credit default swaps and derivatives trades that contributed to the financial meltdown now will be subject to common-sense rules and regulations, just as the stock market is. The Securities and Exchange Commission has been given more authority to oversee hedge funds and private equity funds.

Pete Rose was thrown out of baseball for betting against his own team. But on Wall Street, big banks and investment companies raked in billions by dealing in home loans to people who couldn't afford to pay them back and then made bets that those families would go into foreclosure.

The major credit-rating agencies made their own contribution to the meltdown by failing to scrutinize the financial products and giving ratings that did not reflect their value. New oversight and transparency rules will change that.

Finally, it was important to me to ensure that banks on the main streets of Northeastern Minnesota did not pay for the misdeeds of Wall Street. I fought hard to ensure that this law targets those who were at the heart of the problem. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation rates have been readjusted so premiums are lower for banks on Main Street and higher for banks on Wall Street. Just as a driver with a bad driving record pays higher car-insurance premiums, big financial institutions will see their rates go up.

This new law is an important first step toward common-sense reform of our financial markets. But if the meltdown taught us anything, it is that big banks and Wall Street investors exist to generate profits for investors and not to protect consumers. It is the job of Congress to remain vigilant on behalf of the people.

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Jim Oberstar, D-Minn., is a member of the U.S. House of Representatives.