How Paul Ryan's Budget Paves the Way for Another Financial Crisis
http://www.thenation.com/blog/179155/how-paul-ryans-budget-paves-way-another-financial-crisis
Rep. Paul Ryan leaves a closed-door meeting on Capitol Hill, April 2, 2014 (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
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Cutting the Securities and Exchange Commission budget: Already, the head of the SEC is complaining that her agencys budget is not nearly adequate to police the countrys massive financial sector. In a speech earlier this year at SEC headquarters, director Mary Jo White said, our funding falls significantly short of the level we need to fulfill our mission to investors, companies and the markets. The SEC has only 4,200 employees, but must regulate eighteen different stock exchanges and over 25,000 different market participantsand the agencys responsibilities are growing thanks to new mandates from the Dodd-Frank financial reform legislation.
Ryan has a much different take in his budget: he thinks the SEC is just too big. He doesnt apply a dollar figure, but makes it clear the agencys already meager budget should be substantially streamlined.
In the run-up to the financial crisis and its aftermath, the SEC repeatedly failed to fulfill any part of its mission, his blueprint notes, ticking off a familiar list of whiffs, from the unsound nature of Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers to the Ponzi schemes run by Allen Stanford and Bernie Madoff.
So far, so good. But Ryan goes on: These failures have taken place despite significant increases in funding at the SEC, which has seen its budget increase almost sixty-six percent since 2004.