"John Dugan, currently serving as Comptroller of the Currency, hasn’t gotten nearly as much attention as his fellow architects-of-disaster Rubin, Summers, and Greenspan. But Zach Carter’s latest article in The Nation makes it clear that this man deserves a prominent place in the Deregulation Hall of Fame. Dugan, as much as anyone, gets credit for knocking down the wall between banking and commerce that sank the country into financial chaos.
Dugan’s dubious career started at the Treasury in 1989, when he wrote an influential book on deposit insurance. Carter writes:
Published in 1991 under the mundane title Modernizing the Financial System: Recommendations for Safer, More Competitive Banks, Dugan’s tome became known as the Green Book, and it established him as one of the earliest architects of the “too big to fail” economy.
In addition to writing what essentially became the Bible of Deregulation, Dugan had his hand in several disastrous policies that got the banking industry into the kind of speculative activities that turned Wall Street into a casino. As Carter explains:
His first objective was to allow banks to expand into multiple states without incurring additional regulatory oversight. His second, more radical goal was to allow relatively safe commercial banks to merge with riskier investment banks and insurance companies. And his third, most extreme initiative was to allow commercial firms–General Electric, Sears–to purchase a bank.
His most recent escapades include distorting the history of the subprime mortgage disaster and trying to block consumer protection. His term is up in August 2010, and from the perspective of those interested in serious financial reform, that’s not a moment too soon. As Carter puts it, “given Dugan’s record, it’s hard to see why he has been allowed to stay on the job for Obama’s first year. It is not customary for the president to discharge the comptroller in the middle of his term, but he does have the legal authority to do so.” Isn’t it time to get rid of the bad blood and chart a new course for America’s economy?
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http://www.newdeal20.org/?p=7092