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Finally, politicians boss the banks

February 4, 2010 14:18

By

Alex Brummer,

Alex Brummer

3 min read

This weekend, finance ministers from the Group of Seven most advanced nations will gather in the town of Iqualit, just South of the Canadian Arctic Circle, to try to put some order into the chaos of banking regulation. The return to fat profits, bonuses and greed at the global banks, just 15 months after the ‘Great Panic’ of 2008 has been so swift that it has left politicians and policy-makers in the starting traps.

The spirit of co-operation that Gordon Brown sought to engender at the first G20 London summit in April 2009 has quickly fractured and ideas for regulation and taxation of the banks have spun off in a dozen directions.

President Obama, having made healthcare reform his domestic focus in his first year in office, suddenly discovered last month — after the defeat of the Democrats in the Massachusetts special Senate election — that what is really worrying Americans is the state of economy and the greed of Wall Street.

In a pair of rapid fire actions, which left most advanced countries in the dust, he first imposed a savage levy on bank assets designed to recoup every “last dime” of the $700bn of bailout assistance provided to the banks through the troubled asset relief plan (TARP). Secondly, on the eve of this year’s State of the Union address, he appeared at the White House accompanied by the mountainous figure of Paul Volcker (Federal Reserve chairman in the 1980s) and unveiled his plans to defenestrate the super-banks.

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