The following is from her FB post today. She debunks the notion promoted by Clinton and Krugman that big banks were not the cause of the financial crisis. Indeed they were as five of these big banks recently failed to pass a Dodd-Frank requirement proving how they were financial viable in another crash. This could lead to yet another crash. The following is quoted verbatim from the Warren post:
"Eight years ago, Too Big to Fail banks sparked a financial meltdown,
then sucked up hundreds of billions of dollars in taxpayer bailouts.
Today, after an extensive, multi-year review process, federal regulators
concluded that five of the country's biggest banks are still –
literally – Too Big to Fail. They officially determined that five US
banks are large enough that any one of them could crash the economy
again if they started to fail and were not bailed out.
"This
announcement is a very big deal. It’s scary. And it means that, unless
these banks promptly address the concerns identified by the regulators,
the government must push these banks to get smaller and less complex.
"The announcement also dramatically demonstrates the danger of taking
our focus off the big banks as we think about how to prevent the next
major crisis.
"There’s been a lot of revisionist history
floating around lately that the Too Big to Fail banks weren't really
responsible for the financial crisis. That talk isn't new. Wall Street
lobbyists have tried to deflect blame for years. But the claim is
absolutely untrue.
"There would have been no crisis without these
giant banks. They encouraged reckless mortgage lending both by gobbling
up an endless stream of mortgages to securitize and by funding the slimy
subprime lenders who peddled their miserable products to millions of
American families. The giant banks spread that risk throughout the
financial system by misleading investors about the quality of the
mortgages in the securities they were offering. The Financial Crisis
Inquiry Commission (FCIC) spent years looking into the causes of the
crisis and concluded that “collapsing mortgage-lending standards and the
mortgage securitization pipeline lit and spread the flame of contagion
and crisis.”
Big bank executives got rich off that pipeline, but
when it all predictably – yes, predictably – blew up, the government
lavished their institutions with billions in taxpayer bailouts. None of
those executives lost their jobs in exchange for the taxpayer rescue,
and none of them went to jail for the rampant illegal activity that has
been subsequently uncovered by the Department of Justice in bank
settlement after bank settlement after bank settlement. Some of them,
like Jamie Dimon at JPMorgan Chase – whose bank was tagged as a
continuing threat to the economy today – are still running the same
banks.
"Revisionist history is dangerous because it can blind us
in the present – and bind us in the future. As the FCIC wrote, "If we do
not learn from history, we are unlikely to fully recover from it.”
Today’s announcement should remind us of the central role that the big
banks played in the last crisis – and it is a giant, flashing sign
warning us about the central role they will play in the next crisis
unless both Congress and our regulators show some backbone, stand up to
the revolving door culture that is pervasive in Washington, resist the
millions spent on Wall Street lobbying and campaign contributions, and
demand real changes at these banks. Today, our top regulators warned us
about the danger of the biggest banks – and we would be foolish to
ignore their warnings."
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