Tim Fernholz says that regulatory reforms need to be a lot tougher if Democrats intend to campaign on them:

On Monday, President Barack Obama released a complimentary statement about Sen. Chris Dodd‘s latest proposal for financial reform, singling out its creation of “a new consumer financial protection agency to set and enforce clear rules of the road.”

This is notable largely because it is not, in fact, true. What the bill actually creates is a Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection within the Federal Reserve, a move that has raised great concern among consumer advocates who note, with more accuracy, that the Fed’s numerous consumer-protection failures played a large role in the recent crisis. But the rhetoric around the creation of a new consumer-protection agency illustrates the central pitfall of financial regulatory reform: telling real reform from the cosmetic.

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