Marlys Harris

The Consumer Reporter

Who Should Protect Consumers?

By Marlys Harris | Oct 1, 2009 |

Remember “states’ rights?”

Back when the federal government was a strong regulator of consumer products and services, including banks, airlines, brokerages, cable TV and drugs, pro-business factions screamed bloody murder. According to them, federal regulation usurped states’ rights to enforce their own laws, which, they argued, would be more sensitive to the needs of local businesses and residents. At the time, state laws and regs were weaker than the feds’.

Then along came Presidents Reagan, Bush and Bush. I don’t think I am being too hyperbolic by saying that they saw federal regulation as the source of all evil, including hangnails and dandruff. (While President Clinton’s inclinations may have been pro-gov, he did little while in office to strengthen federal agencies.) By their lights, regulations increased costs and placed burdens on businesses and consumers alike. Throughout their administrations, they did everything they could to weaken federal regulation, and by every measure, they succeeded. If you don’t believe me, just think about the SEC’s regulation of Bernard Madoff.

Then along came New York attorney general Eliot Spitzer. When he asked the feds why they didn’t enforce consumer protections, they responded with ideology of states’ rights. He thought, he noted at a 2002 meeting of the Consumer Federation of America, okay, I represent a state, I’ll enforce the law. So he sued banks for predatory lending, investment banks for inflating stock prices, and mutual funds for market-timing and late trading, among other things. But wouldn’t you just know it? The minute Spitzer and other A.G.’s asserted their states’ rights to protect consumers, the pro-biz long knives suddenly decided that states’ rights were out. Federal law should rule. Thus, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which controls national banks, pre-empted states from prosecuting banks. (In short order, the federal pre-emption claim spread to other areas of regulation, including nursing homes and drugs.) The result: a financial regulatory vacuum and a mortgage crisis to end all mortgage crises with foreclosures still soaring. (A few months ago, however, in a landmark case Cuomo v the Clearing House Association and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Supreme Court abridged the right of federal banking regulators to pre-empt state consumer protection statutes.)

Now comes the proposal to create the Consumer Financial Protection Agency, which we ordinary folks need like crazy — if only to keep lousy financial products, like say, mortgages so packed with fees that nobody could ever have repaid them, off the market. An important provision safeguards states’ rights to take independent action to protect consumers. State A.G.’s argue that right now, federal regulation is split among a number of agencies — the Federal Reserve, the OCC, the Office of Thrift Supervision, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission —  which have historically focused on what’s good for banks and brokerage houses, not what’s good for ordinary peeps like you and me.

The financial services industry, of course, opposes the CFPA, not, they say, because it might inhibit them from continuing their predatory lending practices. No, what they’re against is the state’s rights provision, and keeping it in the bill is shaping up to be a big battle as the legislation moves through Congress. Banks assert that abiding by a plethora of state regs will boost their costs.

I don’t place much faith in the higher costs argument. Businesses are always whining about higher costs. Banks want federal regulation right now because it’s weak. If state laws were weak, they would be arguing for states’ rights. The same goes for consumer advocates but vice-versa.

At this moment, I wouldn’t be too upset if the states’ rights provision is dropped. Financial reform legislation, currently under consideration in Congress, will probably unify federal regulation. The pro-federal Obama administration is likely to toughen oversight of the financial services industry. And, future electoral shifts would make state A.G.’s less interested in consumer rights.

Financial services companies may find that getting what they want may not really be what they want. Case in point: Insurance company lobbyists persuaded Texas, in 2003, to pass a tort reform law that strictly limited awards in medical malpractice cases. The law was so successful in lowering the costs of litigation, that doctors, nursing homes and other health-care providers now feel safe in carrying less coverage. Ergo, insurance sales are dropping.

If federal financial regulation turns out to be rigorous, banks and other financial institutions will again be declaring the importance of states’ rights.

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  •  
    1

    Milton F.

    10/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Who Should Protect Consumers?

    The Fallacy of Higher Costs Hurting Business

    So, a big body of law makers, either the New York state houses or the federal Congress pass some new regs, like Sarbanes-Oxley that the American Enterprise Institute and Citizens for American Prosperity say will burden businesses with higher costs because the compliance burden is too high. We should, as you point out, ignore this whine.

    Here's how that rolls. You have a new reg. Say it affects the entire mortgage industry. All players in the mortgage industry hire up new staff, or send old staff to training, and implement some new systems, and comply (or get fined, which is probably more expensive). So, costs across the industry rise, roughly evenly. Some players may be more efficient at implementing compliance, so their costs rise a little less. They hold their margins steady and increase prices less, and gain market share. We reward this, because the race goes to the swift.

    Consumers may wind up paying a little more for the product. But, wait. You have a whole bunch of job creation. Both on the regulator's side (need someone to enforce compliance) and on industry's side (need someone to ensure compliance). That added cost of compliance is more jobs. So, there is more money in the consumer economy to offset the increases in prices.

    But wait, there's more. So, mortgage fees go up. As a result, cost of living wage adjustments go up too. Economically, everyone is about the same, except for the folks who enforce the laws and for the folks who are new hires to ensure compliance. They are all better off. And you can still get a mortgage or a credit card. Only you have protections when you do so.

    I'm in favor.

    A good reason to want a clause allowing states to enforce stricter rules than the feds will:
    Imagine, if you will, a very pro-business administration coming back into power. They shift funding away from enforcement, and enforcement goes away. Kind of like enforcement of everything save regulations on unions, 2001-2008. Without the ability to enforce their own laws in the absence of federal interest, the states are left whistling dixie again, like in the pre-Spitzer era. I'm not a big "States' Rights" fan, but I am always in favor of someone being allowed to enforce a stricter standard.

  •  
    2

    MarlysHarris

    10/08/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Who Should Protect Consumers?

    Gosh, Milton F., You should be writing this blog.

  •  
    3

    Milton F.

    10/09/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Who Should Protect Consumers?

    Who would protect the citizenry from whatever it is that I protect them from?

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Marlys Harris

Marlys Harris has been covering personal finance at least since the time of the Pharaohs, first in 12 years at Money and then as finance editor at Consumer Reports. She has written and edited stories on just about everything having to do with money, from workers comp to marrying for money.

Marlys Harris

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