The administration has
absolutely no shame in gutting any and all programs that offer a modicum of
protection for the working electorate. Trumps ridiculous claim that credit protections
from predatory lenders "that unduly burden the financial industry" is more proof that the wealthy elite and corporate America have a free hand in
pillaging the poor and working class at will. How much more will our elected
officials have us bleed before stepping up to their job. NOVEMBER IS COMING,
arm yourself with knowledge and vote for your betterment and fair treatment.
A do-nothing tactic at CFPB CFBP’s
bare-minimum tack
WHITE HOUSE budget
director Mick Mulvaney testifies before the Senate Budget Committee last week.
He plans to make the CFPB more business-friendly. (Susan Walsh Associated
Press)
DAVID LAZARUS LA
Times
Let’s say there was a federal agency charged solely with
protecting consumers from financial abuse. And let’s say that agency was so
good at its job, it succeeded in returning $12 billion to consumers who had
been ripped off by greedy banks and lenders.
How would you reward that agency?
If you’re President Trump, the answer is to slash its
funding by 23% and get rid of rules “that unduly burden the financial
industry.”
The $4.4-trillion White House budget proposal unveiled last
week drew heat for its generous allotments to the military at the expense of
social programs, as well as its ridiculous pretense that $1.5 trillion in
much-needed infrastructure spending would be provided mainly by state and local
governments.
I also pointed out that the budget plan included only
halfhearted measures to fulfill Trump’s stated goal of reducing sky-high
prescription drug prices.
Nearly overshadowed by these developments was the budget’s
defenestration of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which Trump has
made a top policy goal.
It’s been clear since our businessman-in-chief took office
that he had no love for a federal consumer watchdog — and that his
administration was more than happy to dance to the tune of financial-services
industry lobbyists who wanted it dead.
After White House budget chief Mick Mulvaney became the
bureau’s interim director in November, he systematically reined in the CFPB’s
enforcement actions and openly declared his intention of creating a more
business-friendly agency.
The administration’s middle finger to consumers was on full
display last week when Mulvaney, in presenting the CFPB’s latest five-year
strategic plan, said that “we have committed to fulfill the bureau’s statutory
responsibilities, but go no further.”
That’s the regulatory equivalent of a supermarket saying,
“Yeah, we’ll ring you up but bag your own damn groceries.”
And if Trump has his way, that supermarket will close down
as soon as he can get away with it.
“It’s open season on consumers,” said Sally Greenberg,
executive director of the National Consumers League. “The most predatory actors
— payday lenders, student loan companies, the debt collection industry — can
operate with virtual impunity from federal regulators at the bureau.”
The agency’s new mantra of “don’t worry, be happy” was
spelled out last month when Mulvaney said the CFPB would “reconsider” its
oversight of payday and car title loans. For good measure, he dropped a lawsuit
against a group of payday lenders that allegedly duped customers by failing to
reveal annual interest rates of nearly 1,000%.
Mulvaney also has issued a series of invitations for
businesses to submit feedback on the bureau’s operations and suggest
“constructive” changes.
Last week, banks and other companies falling under the
CFPB’s oversight were asked to assess “the overall efficiency and effectiveness
of its supervision program and whether any changes to the program would be
appropriate.”
I compared Mulvaney’s strategic plan for 2018 through 2022
to the last such document , issued under the Obama administration and covering
2013 through 2017.
These could be two completely different government agencies.
Under Obama, the bureau’s top goal was to “prevent financial
harm to consumers while promoting good practices that benefit them.”
Under Trump, the No. 1 goal is to “ensure that all consumers
have access to markets for consumer financial products and services.”
The CFPB’s secondary goal under Obama was to “empower
consumers to live better financial lives.” Under Trump, it’s to “implement and
enforce the law consistently to ensure that markets for consumer financial
products and services are fair, transparent and competitive.”
“What happened to protecting consumers from financial harm?”
asked Joe Ridout, a spokesman for the advocacy group Consumer Action. “The
implicit message of the new plan is that the CFPB will wave through whatever
predatory practices companies can come up with.”
He described Mulvaney as “an arsonist burning down every
consumer protection he can find.”
In his introduction to the new strategic plan, Mulvaney said
any federal agency that strives to go above and beyond the call of duty
“ignores the will of the American people.”
“Pushing the envelope,” he said, “risks trampling upon the
liberties of our citizens.… I have resolved that this will not happen at the
bureau.”
To accomplish this regime of low expectations, he’s capping
the CFPB’s budget for the upcoming fiscal year at $485 million, or about as
much as the agency spent in 2015. Its annual budget is currently more than $630
million.
Mulvaney is already off to a great start in terms of
emptying the bureau’s coffers by requesting no new funds for the current
quarter. Instead, he’ll deplete a “reserve fund” intended to help pay for
investigative work, which the bureau won’t be doing much of anymore.
By 2020, the Trump administration wants the CFPB to no
longer be funded by the Federal Reserve. It wants funding to be controlled by
Congress, which would mean more influence by lobbyists.
In its budget proposal, the White House says its objectives
for the bureau are to “impose financial discipline, reduce wasteful spending
and ensure appropriate congressional oversight.”
“These changes,” it says, “would allow CFPB to focus its
efforts on enforcing enacted consumer protection laws and eliminate the
functions that allowed the agency to become an unaccountable bureaucracy with
unchecked regulatory authority.”
As I said, that “unchecked regulatory authority” resulted in
$12 billion being returned to consumers. It forced mortgage lenders and credit
card companies to be more transparent.
Oh, and it slapped Wells Fargo with a $100-million fine
after the bank opened millions of accounts without customers’ knowledge.
Christine Hines, legislative director for the National Assn.
of Consumer Advocates, said Trump’s budget and Mulvaney’s strategic plan make
clear their aim “is to hamstring the CFPB and make it impossible for it to
fulfill its mission to protect consumers from financial rip-offs.”
“It is a solid wink to payday lenders, credit bureaus and
big banks that they are free to cheat and scam regular people with impunity,”
she said.
Trump talks a lot about “winning.”
Now you know whom he’s thinking of.
David Lazarus’ column runs Tuesdays and Fridays. He also can
be seen daily on KTLA-TV Channel 5 and followed on Twitter @Davidlaz . Send
your tips or feedback to david.lazarus@latimes.com
.
No comments:
Post a Comment