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H.R. 3126 Not a Good Deal For Consumer
U.S. Chamber: We Need New Approach to Consumer Financial Protection The bill cuts back significantly on todays preemption of state laws, creating 51 sets of disclosure rules and enforcement regimes in addition to the multiple federal overseers. The CFPA will have ill-defined, sweeping powers and responsibilities without the appropriate checks and balances. Not only is it unclear what types of businesses would in fact be covered, but there is significant uncertainty regarding what businesses will need to do to comply. The CFPA is yet another federal regulator that will compete with existing regulators responsible for the overall health of inpidual financial institutions, enhancing the type of regulatory conflict and arbitrage that contributed to the financial crisis. The regulatory and legal uncertainty generated by the CFPA will result in a reduction of credit and credit choices for small business consumers. According to the Chamber, the CFPA approach does not address the fundamental flaws in, or within the existing regulatory structure. The Chamber called for legislation that strengthens enforcement against illegal and predatory practices by expanding the ability of the seven current federal regulators tasked with consumer protection to do the job right.
Specifically, legislation is needed that would develop clear, concise, and uniform national disclosures about the risks that financial products pose, expand federal rules to close the gaps in regulation, and requires all regulators to work together to ensure like products are regulated equally, said Hirschmann.
The U.S. Chamber is the world's largest business federation representing more than 3 million businesses and organizations of every size, sector, and region.
(U.S. Chamber of Commerce)
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11/20/2009
09:00 AM
- Sams Holiday Taste
11/20/2009 - DMC Music 11/20/2009 05:00 PM - Ribbon Cutting |
