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Testimony: 

Before the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, U.S. 
Senate: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

For Release on Delivery: 
Expected at 2:00 p.m. EDT:
Tuesday, September 29, 2009: 

Financial Regulation: 

Recent Crisis Reaffirms the Need to Overhaul the U.S. Regulatory 
System: 

Statement of Richard J. Hillman, Managing Director: 
Financial Markets and Community Investment: 

GAO-09-1049T: 

[End of section] 

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee: 

I am pleased to be here today to discuss issues relating to efforts to 
reform the regulatory structure of the financial system. In the midst 
of the worst economic crisis affecting financial markets globally in 
more than 75 years, federal officials have taken unprecedented steps to 
stem the unraveling of the financial services sector. While these 
actions aimed to provide relief in the short term, the severity of the 
crisis has shown clearly that in the long term, the current U.S. 
financial regulatory system was in need of significant reform. Our 
January 2009 report presented a framework for evaluating proposals to 
modernize the U.S. financial regulatory system, and work we have 
conducted since that report further underscores the urgent need for 
changes in the system.[Footnote 1] Given the importance of the U.S. 
financial sector to the domestic and international economies, in 
January 2009, we also added modernization of its outdated regulatory 
system as a new area to our list of high-risk areas of government 
operations because of the fragmented and outdated regulatory structure. 
[Footnote 2] We noted that modernizing the U.S. financial regulatory 
system will be a critical step to ensuring that the challenges of the 
21ST century can be met. In my statement today, which is based on our 
reports and additional work we have completed, I will discuss (1) how 
regulation has evolved and recent work that further illustrates the 
significant limitations and gaps in the existing regulatory system, (2) 
the experiences of countries with other types of varying regulatory 
structures during the financial crisis, and (3) how certain aspects of 
proposals would reform the U.S. regulatory system. 

To do this work, we synthesized existing GAO work and other studies on 
the financial crisis, such as those from the Department of Treasury, 
Group of Twenty (G20), Group of Thirty (G30), and the Committee on 
Capital Markets Regulation, among others. We also selected a judgmental 
sample of countries--Australia, Canada, The Netherlands, Sweden, and 
the United Kingdom--because they each had advanced financial markets 
and were illustrative of regulatory changes made internationally. We 
compiled information from publicly available sources on the individual 
countries' regulatory systems and the countries' experiences during the 
crisis. Finally, we used our framework of regulatory reform elements 
that was developed for our January 2009 report to analyze the strengths 
and weaknesses of legislative proposals on regulatory reform. Our work 
was conducted in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit 
to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable 
basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 
We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for 
our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. This work 
was conducted between August 2009 and September 2009. 

Summary: 

The current U.S. financial regulatory system is fragmented due to 
complex arrangements of federal and state regulation put into place 
over the past 150 years. It has not kept pace with major developments 
in financial markets and products in recent decades. Today, almost a 
dozen federal regulatory agencies, numerous self-regulatory 
organizations, and hundreds of state financial regulatory agencies 
share responsibility for overseeing the financial services industry. 
Several key changes in financial markets and products in recent decades 
have highlighted significant limitations and gaps in the existing U.S. 
regulatory system. For example, regulators have struggled, and often 
failed, both to identify the systemic risks posed by large and 
interconnected financial conglomerates and to ensure these entities 
adequately manage their risks. In addition, regulators have had to 
address problems in financial markets resulting from the activities of 
sometimes less-regulated and large market participants--such as nonbank 
mortgage lenders, hedge funds, and credit rating agencies--some of 
which play significant roles in today's financial markets. Further, the 
increasing prevalence of new and more complex financial products has 
challenged regulators and investors, and consumers have faced 
difficulty understanding new and increasingly complex retail mortgage 
and credit products. 

Our recent work has also highlighted significant gaps in the regulatory 
system and the need for an entity responsible for identifying existing 
and emerging systemic risks. For example, our July 2009 report on 
oversight of banks' fair lending practices revealed that the fragmented 
financial regulatory system limited the consistency and effectiveness 
of regulators' oversight of these practices. In addition, our recent 
reports on regulators' oversight of risk management systems found that 
regulators were not sufficiently focused on looking across institutions 
to identify factors that could affect the overall financial system was 
in part responsible for the failure to detect problems that 
significantly contributed to the crisis. Reports from a variety of 
international groups have identified similar weaknesses in regulatory 
systems globally and have called for a number of reforms. 

Various countries have implemented changes in their regulatory systems 
in recent years, but the current crisis affected most countries 
regardless of their structure. All of the countries we reviewed have 
more concentrated regulatory structures than that of the United States. 
Some countries, such as the United Kingdom, have chosen an integrated 
approach to regulation that unites safety and soundness and business 
conduct issues under a single regulator. Others, such as Australia, 
have chosen a "twin peaks" approach, in which separate agencies are 
responsible for safety and soundness and business conduct regulation. 
However, regardless of regulatory structure, each country we reviewed 
was affected to some extent by the recent financial crisis. One 
regulatory approach was not necessarily more effective than another in 
preventing or mitigating a financial crisis. However, regulators in 
some countries had already taken some actions that may have reduced the 
impact on their institutions. These and other countries also have taken 
or are currently contemplating additional changes to their regulatory 
systems to address weaknesses identified during this crisis. 

The Department of the Treasury's recent proposal to reform the U.S. 
financial regulatory system includes some elements that would likely 
improve oversight of the financial markets and make the financial 
system more sound, stable, and safer for consumers and investors. For 
example, under this proposal a new governmental body would have 
responsibility for assessing threats that could pose systemic risk. 
This proposal would also create an entity responsible for business 
conduct, that is, ensuring that consumers of financial services were 
adequately protected. However, our analysis indicated that additional 
opportunities exist beyond the Treasury's proposal for additional 
regulatory consolidation that could further decrease fragmentation in 
the regulatory system, reduce the potential for differing regulatory 
treatment, and improve regulatory independence. 

U.S. Financial Regulatory System's Failure to Keep Pace with Market 
Developments Underscores the Need for Reforms: 

As a result of 150 years of changes to financial regulation in the 
United States, the regulatory system has become complex and fragmented. 
Today, responsibilities for overseeing the financial services industry 
are shared among almost a dozen federal banking, securities, futures, 
and other regulatory agencies, numerous self-regulatory organizations, 
and hundreds of state financial regulatory agencies. For example: 

* Insured depository institutions are overseen by five federal 
agencies--the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), the Board 
of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Federal Reserve), the 
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), the Office of Thrift 
Supervision (OTS), and the National Credit Union Administration (NCUA)--
and states supervise state-chartered depository and certain other 
institutions. 

* Securities activities and markets are overseen by the Securities and 
Exchange Commission (SEC) and state government entities, and private 
sector organizations performing self-regulatory functions. 

* Commodity futures markets and activities are overseen by the 
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and also by industry self- 
regulatory organizations. 

* Insurance activities are primarily regulated at the state level with 
little federal involvement. 

Other federal regulators also play important roles in the financial 
regulatory system, such as the Federal Trade Commission, which acts as 
the primary federal agency responsible for enforcing compliance with 
federal consumer protection laws for financial institutions such as 
finance companies that are not overseen by another financial regulator. 

Much of this structure has developed as the result of statutory and 
regulatory measures taken in response to financial crises or 
significant developments in the financial services sector. For example, 
the Federal Reserve was created in 1913 in response to financial panics 
and instability around the turn of the century, and much of the 
remaining structure for bank and securities regulation was created as 
the result of the Great Depression turmoil of the 1920s and 1930s. 
Changes in the types of financial activities permitted for financial 
institutions and their affiliates have also shaped the financial 
regulatory system over time. For example, under the Glass-Steagall 
provisions of the Banking Act of 1933, financial institutions were 
prohibited from simultaneously offering commercial and investment 
banking services, but with the passage of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 
1999, Congress permitted financial institutions to fully engage in both 
types of activities, under certain conditions. 

Various Market Developments Have Revealed Limitations in the Existing 
Regulatory Structure: 

Several key developments in financial markets and products in the past 
few decades have significantly challenged the existing financial 
regulatory structure.[Footnote 3] (See figure 1.) 

Figure 1: Key Developments and Resulting Challenges That Have Hindered 
the Effectiveness of the Financial Regulatory System: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustrated table] 

Developments in financial markets and products: Emergence of large, 
complex, globally active, interconnected financial conglomerates; 
Examples of how developments have challenged the regulatory system: 
* Regulators sometimes lack sufficient authority, tools, or 
capabilities to oversee and mitigate risks. 
* Identifying, preventing, mitigating, and resolving systemic crises 
has become more difficult. 

Developments in financial markets and products: Less-regulated entities 
have come to play increasingly critical roles in financial system; 
Examples of how developments have challenged the regulatory system: 
* Nonbank lenders and a new private-label securitization market played 
significant roles in the subprime mortgage crisis that led to broader 
market turmoil. 
* Activities of hedge funds have posed systemic risks. 
* Overreliance on credit ratings of mortgage-backed products 
contributed to the recent turmoil in financial markets. 
* Financial institutions’ use of off-balance sheet entities led to 
ineffective risk disclosure and exacerbated recent market instability. 

Developments in financial markets and products: New and complex 
products that pose challenges to financial stability and investor and 
consumer understanding of risks; 
Examples of how developments have challenged the regulatory system: 
* Complex structured finance products have made it difficult for 
institutions and their regulators to manage associated risks. 

* Growth in complex and less-regulated over-the-counter derivatives 
markets have created systemic risks and revealed market infrastructure 
weaknesses. 

* Investors have faced difficulty understanding complex investment 
products, either because they failed to seek out necessary information 
or were misled by improper sales practices. 

* Consumers have faced difficulty understanding mortgages and credit 
cards with new and increasingly complicated features, due in part to 
limitations in consumer disclosures and financial literacy efforts. 

* Accounting and auditing entities have faced challenges in trying to 
ensure that accounting and financial reporting requirements 
appropriately meet the needs of investors and other financial market 
participants. 

Developments in financial markets and products: Financial markets have 
become increasingly global in nature, and regulators have had to 
coordinate their efforts internationally; 
Examples of how developments have challenged the regulatory system: 
* Standard setters and regulators also face new challenges in dealing 
with global convergence of accounting and auditing standards. 

* Fragmented U.S. regulatory structure has complicated some efforts to 
coordinate internationally with other regulators, such as negotiations 
on Basel II and certain insurance matters. 

Sources: GAO (analysis); Art Explosion (images). 

[End of figure] 

Regulators have struggled, and often failed, to identify the systemic 
risks posed by large and interconnected financial conglomerates, as 
well as new and complex products, and to adequately manage these risks. 
These firms' operations increasingly cross financial sectors, but no 
single regulator is tasked with assessing the risks such an institution 
might pose across the entire financial system. In addition, regulators 
have had to address problems in financial markets resulting from the 
activities of sometimes less-regulated and large market participants-- 
such as nonbank mortgage lenders, hedge funds, and credit rating 
agencies--some of which play significant roles in today's financial 
markets. Further, the increasing prevalence of new and more complex 
financial products has challenged regulators and investors, and 
consumers have faced difficulty understanding new and increasingly 
complex retail mortgage and credit products. Standard setters for 
accounting and financial regulators have also faced growing challenges 
in ensuring that accounting and audit standards appropriately respond 
to financial market developments. And despite the increasingly global 
aspects of financial markets, the current fragmented U.S. regulatory 
structure has complicated some efforts to coordinate internationally 
with other regulators. 

Because of this hearing's focus on prudential regulation of the banking 
industry, I would like to reinforce that our prior work has repeatedly 
identified limitations of the fragmented banking regulatory structure. 
For example: 

* In 1996, we reported that the division of responsibilities among the 
four federal bank oversight agencies in the United States was not based 
on specific areas of expertise, functions or activities, either of the 
regulator or the banks for which they are responsible, but based on 
institution type and whether the banks were members of the Federal 
Reserve System. Despite their efforts to coordinate, this multiplicity 
of regulators was cited as resulting in inconsistent treatment of 
banking institutions in examinations, enforcement actions, and 
regulatory decisions.[Footnote 4] 

* In a 2007 report we noted that having bank holding company affiliates 
supervised by multiple banking regulators increased the potential for 
conflicting information to be provided to the institution, such as when 
a large, complex banking organization initially received conflicting 
information from the Federal Reserve, its consolidated supervisor, and 
OCC, its primary bank supervisor, about the firm's business continuity 
provisions.[Footnote 5] 

* In 2005, we reported that a difference in authority across the 
banking regulators could lead to problems in oversight. For example, 
FDIC's authority over the holding companies and affiliates of 
industrial loan corporations was not as extensive as the authority that 
the other supervisors have over the holding companies and affiliates of 
banks and thrifts. For example, FDIC's authority to examine an 
affiliate of an insured depository institution exists only to disclose 
the relationship between the depository institution and the affiliate 
and the effect of that relationship on the depository institution. 
Therefore, any reputation or other risk from an affiliate that has no 
relationship with the industrial loan corporation could go undetected. 
[Footnote 6] 

* In a 2004 report, we noted cases in which interagency cooperation 
between bank regulators has been hindered when two or more agencies 
share responsibility for supervising a bank. For example, in the 
failure of Superior Bank of West Virginia problems between OTS, 
Superior's primary supervisor, and FDIC hindered a coordinated 
supervisory approach, including OTS refusing to let FDIC participate in 
at least one examination. Similarly, disagreements between OCC and FDIC 
contributed to the 1999 failure of Keystone Bank.[Footnote 7] 

* In a 2007 report, we expressed concerns over the appropriateness of 
having OTS oversee diverse global financial firms given the size of the 
agency relative to the institutions for which it was responsible. 
[Footnote 8] 

Our recent work has further revealed limitations in the current 
regulatory system, reinforcing the need for change and the need for an 
entity responsible for identifying existing and emerging systemic 
risks. In January 2009, we designated modernizing the outdated U.S. 
financial regulatory system as a new high-risk area to bring focus to 
the need for a broad-based systemwide transformation to address major 
economy, efficiency, and effectiveness challenges.[Footnote 9] We have 
found that: 

* Having multiple regulators results in inconsistent oversight. Our 
February 2009 report on the Bank Secrecy Act found that multiple 
regulators are examining for compliance with the same laws across 
industries and, for some larger holding companies, within the same 
institution.[Footnote 10] However, these regulators lack a mechanism 
for promoting greater consistency, reducing unnecessary regulatory 
burden, and identifying concerns across industries. In July 2009, we 
reported many violations by independent mortgage lenders of the fair 
lending laws intended to prevent lending discrimination could go 
undetected because of less comprehensive oversight provided by various 
regulators.[Footnote 11] 

* Lack of oversight exists for derivatives products. In March 2009, we 
reported that the lack of a regulator with authority over all 
participants in the market for credit default swaps (CDS) has made it 
difficult to monitor and manage the potential systemic risk that these 
products can create.[Footnote 12] 

* Gaps in the oversight of significant market participants. We reported 
in May 2009 on the issues and concerns related to hedge funds, which 
have grown into significant market participants with limited regulatory 
oversight.[Footnote 13] For example, under the existing regulatory 
structure, SEC's ability to directly oversee hedge fund advisers is 
limited to those that are required to register or voluntarily register 
with the SEC as an investment advisor. Further, multiple regulators 
(SEC, CFTC, and federal banking regulators) each oversee certain hedge 
fund-related activities and advisers. We concluded that given the 
recent experience with the financial crisis, regulators should have the 
information to monitor the activities of market participants that play 
a prominent role in the financial system, such as hedge funds, to 
protect investors and manage systemic risk. 

* Lack of appropriate resolution authorities for financial market 
institutions. We recently reported that one of the reasons that federal 
authorities provided financial assistance to at least one troubled 
institution--the insurance conglomerate AIG--in the crisis stemmed from 
concerns that a disorderly failure by this institution would have 
contributed to higher borrowing costs and additional failures, further 
destabilizing fragile financial markets. According to Federal Reserve 
officials, the lack of a centralized and orderly resolution mechanism 
presented the Federal Reserve and Treasury with few alternatives in 
this case. The lack of an appropriate resolution mechanism for non- 
banking institutions has resulted in the federal government providing 
assistance and having significant ongoing exposure to AIG. 

* Lack of a focus on systemwide risk. In March 2009 we also reported on 
the results of work we conducted at some large, complex financial 
institutions that indicated that no existing U.S. financial regulator 
systematically looks across institutions to identify factors that could 
affect the overall financial system.[Footnote 14] While regulators 
periodically conducted horizontal examinations on stress testing, 
credit risk practices, and risk management, they did not consistently 
use the results to identify potential systemic risks and have only a 
limited view of institutions' risk management or their 
responsibilities. Our July 2009 report on approaches regulators used to 
restrict the use of financial leveraging--the use of debt or other 
products to purchase assets or create other financial exposures--by 
financial institutions also found that regulatory capital measures did 
not always fully capture certain risks and that none of the multiple 
regulators responsible for individual markets or institutions had clear 
responsibility to assess the potential effects of the buildup of 
systemwide leverage.[Footnote 15] 

Recognition of the need for regulatory reform extends beyond U.S. 
borders. Various international organizations such as the G20, G30, Bank 
for International Settlements, and Committee on Capital Markets 
Regulation have all reported that weaknesses in regulation contributed 
to the financial crisis.[Footnote 16] Specifically, among other things, 
these reports pointed to the fragmented regulatory system, the lack of 
a systemwide view of risks, and the lack of transparency or oversight 
of all market participants as contributing to the crisis. Further, the 
reports noted that sound regulation and a systemwide focus were needed 
to prevent instability in the financial system, and that recent events 
have clearly demonstrated that regulatory failures had contributed to 
the current crisis. 

Other Countries Have Adopted Various Structures for Their Regulatory 
Systems, but the Recent Crisis Is Prompting Additional Changes: 

In response to consolidation in the financial services industry and 
past financial crises, other countries have previously made changes to 
their financial regulatory systems in the years before the most recent 
crisis. For the purposes of our study, we selected five countries-- 
Australia, Canada, Sweden, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom-- 
that had sophisticated financial systems and different regulatory 
structures. Each of these countries restructured their regulatory 
systems within the last 20 years in response to market developments or 
financial crises (see table 1). 

Table 1: Examples of Regulatory Changes: 

Country & Regulatory Structure: Australia - Separate regulator for 
prudential oversight and a separate consumer protection agency that 
oversees conduct of business. Responsibility for systemic stability, 
the payment system, and monetary policy is with the central bank; 
Response to the Crisis: The government expressed willingness to 
purchase residential mortgage backed securities. Retail deposits up to 
AUD $1 million were guaranteed--previously the limit was AUD $20,000; 
Examples of Actions Taken or Contemplated: 
* Reviewing liquidity standards and risk management approaches for 
banks. 

Country & Regulatory Structure: Canada - Single prudential supervisor 
for banks insurance companies, and pension plans. A separate agency 
oversees consumer protection for banking. Securities regulation is 
conducted at the provincial level. The central bank is the lender of 
last resort; 
Response to the Crisis: Banks have accessed liquidity facilities 
provided by the central bank. Government agency has purchased 
residential mortgages from banks; 
Examples of Actions Taken or Contemplated: 
* Reexamining the quality of bank capital, the effect of relying on 
wholesale funding, the risks posed by off balance sheet exposures, the 
role of credit rating agencies, and the need for improved international 
solvency resolution. 

Country & Regulatory Structure: The Netherlands - The prudential and 
systemic risk supervisor of all financial services is the central bank. 
A separate conduct of business regulator also is responsible for 
consumer protection; 
Response to the Crisis: The government took over the Dutch operations 
of an internationally active bank. Other banks were given solvency 
assistance and the government also took on the high risk mortgage 
portfolios of other banks; 
Examples of Actions Taken or Contemplated: 
* Will strengthen capital requirements; 
* Will strengthen supervisory authorities; 
* Will address systemic risk nationally. 

Country & Regulatory Structure: Sweden - A single regulator covers 
banking, securities, and insurance. Sweden's central bank conducts 
monetary policy and is entrusted with promoting safe and efficient 
payment systems; 
Response to the Crisis: The government approved a debt guarantee scheme 
for the medium term borrowing of banks and mortgage institutions. Bank 
deposit insurance limits were increased. One domestic bank failed and 
was resolved; 
Examples of Actions Taken or Contemplated: 
* The government enacted legislation giving it the power to grant 
credit guarantees if there is a serious systemic risk and bank capital 
falls below a regulatory threshold; 
* Changes are being contemplated in the prompt corrective action 
framework, the deposit insurance scheme, cross border crisis 
resolution. 

Country & Regulatory Structure: United Kingdom - A single agency deals 
with banking, insurance, asset management and market supervision and 
regulation. The central bank exercised informal oversight over the 
banking sector; 
Response to the Crisis: The government created a bank recapitalization 
fund, a credit guarantee scheme, and special liquidity scheme, and an 
asset protection scheme; 
Examples of Actions Taken or Contemplated: Reform of the regulatory and 
legislative framework will: 
* reform the corporate governance of banking institutions; 
* change the amount of capital firms will need; 
* reduce their leverage; 
* more intensive regulation of financial firms, and; 
* new powers for authorities to deal with failing banks. 

Source: GAO analysis. 

[End of table] 

The countries we reviewed chose one of two models--with some 
implementing an integrated approach, in which responsibilities for 
overseeing safety and soundness issues and business conduct issues are 
centralized and unified in usually a single regulator, and with others 
implementing what is commonly referred to as a "twin peaks" model, in 
which separate regulatory organizations are responsible for safety and 
soundness and business conduct regulation.[Footnote 17] A single 
regulator is viewed by some as advantageous because, with financial 
firms not being as specialized as they used to be, a single regulator 
presents economies of scale and efficiency advantages, can quickly 
resolve conflicts that arise between regulatory objectives, and the 
regulatory model increases accountability. For example, the United 
Kingdom moved to a more integrated model of financial services 
regulation because it recognized that major financial firms had 
developed into more integrated full services businesses. As a result, 
this country created one agency (Financial Services Authority) to deal 
with banking, insurance, asset management and market supervision and 
regulation. Similarly, Canada and Sweden integrated their regulatory 
systems prior to the current global financial crisis. 

In contrast, other countries chose to follow a twin peaks model. The 
twin peaks model is viewed by some as advantageous because they view 
the two principal objectives of financial regulation--systemic 
protection and consumer protection--as being in conflict. Putting these 
objectives in different agencies institutionalizes the distinction and 
ensures that each agency focuses on one objective. For example, in 
order to better regulate financial conglomerates and minimize 
regulatory arbitrage, Australia created one agency responsible for 
prudential soundness of all deposit taking, general and life insurance, 
and retirement pension funds (Australian Prudential Regulatory 
Authority) and another for business conduct regulation across the 
financial system including all financial institutions, markets, and 
market participants (Australian Securities and Investment Commission). 
In the Netherlands, regulators were divided along the lines of banking, 
insurance, and securities until the twin peaks approach was adopted. 
Under the revised structure, the prudential and systemic risk 
supervisor of all financial services including banking, insurance, 
pension funds, and securities is the central bank (DNB). Another agency 
(Netherlands Authority for Financial Markets) is responsible for 
conduct of business supervision and promoting transparent markets and 
processes to protect consumers. 

However, regardless of the regulatory system structure, these and many 
other countries were affected to some extent by the recent financial 
crisis. For example, the United Kingdom experienced bank failures, and 
the government provided financial support to financial institutions. 
Further, in the Netherlands, where the twin peaks approach is used, the 
government took over the operations of one bank, provided assistance to 
financial institutions to reinforce their solvency positions, and took 
on the risk of a high-risk mortgage portfolio held by another bank, 
among other actions. 

However, regulators or financial institutions in some of these 
countries took steps that may have reduced the impact of the crisis on 
their institutions. For example, according to a testimony that we 
reviewed, the impact on Australian institutions was mitigated by the 
country's relatively stricter prudential standards compared to other 
countries. The Australian prudential regulator had also conducted a 
series of stress tests on its five largest banks that assessed the 
potential impact of asset price changes on institutions. According to 
Canadian authorities, the positive performance of Canadian banks 
relative to banks in other countries in the recent crisis was the 
result of a more conservative risk appetite that limited their 
activities in subprime mortgages, and exotic financial instruments. 
However, both countries still experienced some turbulence, requiring 
among other actions, some government purchases of mortgage-backed 
securities by the Australian government and some Canadian banks taking 
advantage of liquidity facilities provided by the Bank of Canada. 

Authorities in these five countries have taken actions or are 
contemplating additional changes to their financial regulatory systems 
based on weaknesses identified during the current financial crisis. 
These changes included strengthening bank capitalization requirements, 
enhancing corporate governance standards, and providing better 
mechanisms for resolving failed financial institutions. For example, in 
the United Kingdom, in response to its experience dealing with one 
large bank failure (Northern Rock) the government has called for 
strengthening the role of the central bank. The Banking Act of 2009 
formalized a leading role for the Bank of England in resolving 
financial institution and provided it statutory authority in the 
oversight of systemically important payment and settlement systems. 

Reform Proposals Would Enhance U.S. Regulatory System, but Additional 
Opportunities to Improve System Appear to Exist: 

With a clear need to improve regulatory oversight, our January 2009 
report offered a framework for crafting and evaluating regulatory 
reform proposals.[Footnote 18] This framework includes nine 
characteristics that should be reflected in any new regulatory system, 
including: 

* goals that are clearly articulated and relevant, so that regulators 
can effectively conduct activities to implement their missions. 

* appropriately comprehensive coverage to ensure that financial 
institutions and activities are regulated in a way that ensures 
regulatory goals are fully met; 

* a mechanism for identifying, monitoring, and managing risks on a 
systemwide basis, regardless of the source of the risk or the 
institution in which it is created; 

* an adaptable and forward-looking approach allows regulators to 
readily adapt to market innovations and changes and evaluate potential 
new risks; 

* efficient oversight of financial services by, for example, 
eliminating overlapping federal regulatory missions, while effectively 
achieving the goals of regulation; 

* consumer and investor protection as part of the regulatory mission to 
ensure that market participants receive consistent, useful information, 
as well as legal protections for similar financial products and 
services, including disclosures, sales practices standards, and 
suitability requirements; 

* assurance that regulators have independence from inappropriate 
influence; have sufficient resources and authority, and are clearly 
accountable for meeting regulatory goals; 

* assurance that similar institutions, products, risks, and services 
are subject to consistent regulation, oversight, and transparency; and: 

* adequate safeguards that allow financial institution failures to 
occur while limiting taxpayers' exposure to financial risk. 

Various organizations have made proposals to reform the U.S. regulatory 
system, and several proposals have been introduced to the Congress. 
Among these proposals are the administration's proposal, which is 
specified in its white paper and draft legislation, and another 
proposal that has been introduced as legislation in the House of 
Representatives (H.R. 3310).[Footnote 19] 

The administration's proposal includes various elements that could 
potentially improve federal oversight of the financial markets and 
better protect consumers and investors. For example, it establishes a 
council consisting of federal financial regulators that would, among 
other things, advise Congress on financial regulation and monitor the 
financial services market to identify the potential risks systemwide. 
Under H.R. 3310, a board consisting of federal financial regulators and 
private members, would also monitor the financial system for exposure 
to systemic risk and advise Congress. The creation of such a body under 
either proposal would fill an important need in the current U.S. 
regulatory system by establishing an entity responsible for helping 
Congress and regulators identify potential systemic problems and making 
recommendations in response to existing and emerging risks. However, 
such an entity would also need adequate authority to ensure that 
actions were taken in response to its recommendations. As discussed, 
the inability of regulators to take appropriate action to mitigate 
problems that posed systemic risk contributed to the current crisis. 

The administration's proposal also contains measures to improve the 
consistency of consumer and investor protection. First, the 
administration proposes to create a new agency, the Consumer Financial 
Protection Agency (CFPA). Among other things, this agency would assume 
the consumer protection authorities of the current banking regulators 
and would have broad jurisdiction and responsibility for protecting 
consumers of credit, savings, payment and other consumer financial 
products and services. Its supervisory and enforcement authority 
generally would cover all persons subject to the financial consumer 
protection statutes it would be charged with administering. However, 
the SEC and CFTC would retain their consumer protection role in 
securities and derivatives markets. As our January report described, 
consumers have struggled with understanding complex products and the 
multiple regulators responsible for overseeing such issues have not 
always performed effectively. We urged that a new regulatory system be 
designed to provide high-quality, effective, and consistent protection 
for consumers and investors in similar situations. The administration's 
proposal addresses this need by charging a single financial regulatory 
agency with broad consumer protection responsibilities. This approach 
could improve the oversight of this important issue and better protect 
U.S. consumers. However, separating the conduct of consumer protection 
and prudential regulation can also create challenges. Therefore, having 
clear requirements to coordinate efforts across regulators responsible 
for these different missions would be needed. 

Although the Administration's proposal would make various improvements 
in the U.S. regulatory system, our analysis indicated that additional 
opportunities exist to further improve the system exist. Unlike H.R. 
3310, which would combine all five federal depository institution 
regulators, the Administration's proposal would only combine the 
current regulators for national banks and thrifts into one agency, 
leaving the three other depository institution regulators--the Federal 
Reserve, the FDIC, and NCUA--to remain separate. As we reported in our 
January 2009 report, having multiple regulators performing similar 
functions presents challenges.[Footnote 20] For example, we found that 
some regulators lacked sufficient resources and expertise, that the 
need to coordinate among multiple regulators slowed responses to market 
events, and that institutions could take advantage of regulatory 
arbitrage by seeking regulation from an agency more likely to offer 
less scrutiny. Regulators that are funded by assessments on their 
regulated entities can also become overly dependent on individual 
institutions for funding, which could potentially compromise their 
independence because such firms have the ability to choose to be 
overseen by another regulator. 

Finally, regardless of any regulatory reforms that are adopted, we urge 
Congress to continue to actively monitor the progress of such 
implementation and to be prepared to make legislative adjustments to 
ensure that any changes to the U.S. financial regulatory system are as 
effective as possible. In addition, we believe that it is important 
that Congress provides for appropriate GAO oversight of any regulatory 
reforms to ensure accountability and transparency in any new regulatory 
system. GAO stands ready to assist the Congress in its oversight 
capacity and evaluate the progress agencies are making in implementing 
any changes. 

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee, I appreciate the opportunity 
to discuss these critically important issues and would be happy to 
answer any questions that you may have. Thank you. 

Staff Contributions and Acknowledgments: 

For further information on this testimony, please contact Orice 
Williams Brown at (202) 512-8678 or williamso@gao.gov, or Richard J. 
Hillman at (202) 512-8678 or hillmanr@gao.gov. Contact points for our 
Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on 
the last page of this statement. Individuals making key contributions 
to this testimony include Cody J. Goebel, Assistant Director; Sonja J. 
Bensen; Emily R. Chalmers, Patrick S. Dynes; Marc W. Molino; Jill M. 
Naamane; and Paul Thompson. 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Framework for Crafting and Evaluating Regulatory Reform: 

As a result of significant market developments in recent decades that 
have outpaced a fragmented and outdated regulatory structure, 
significant reforms to the U.S. regulatory system are critically and 
urgently needed. The following framework consists of nine elements that 
should be reflected in any new regulatory system. This framework could 
be used to craft proposals, or to identify aspects to be added to 
existing proposals to make them more effective and appropriate for 
addressing the limitations of the current system. 

Table: 

Characteristic: Clearly defined regulatory goals; 
Description: Goals should be clearly articulated and relevant, so that 
regulators can effectively carry out their missions and be held 
accountable. Key issues include considering the benefits of re-
examining the goals of financial regulation to gain needed consensus 
and making explicit a set of updated comprehensive and cohesive goals 
that reflect today's environment. 

Characteristic: Appropriately comprehensive; 
Description: Financial regulations should cover all activities that 
pose risks or are otherwise important to meeting regulatory goals and 
should ensure that appropriate determinations are made about how 
extensive such regulations should be, considering that some activities 
may require less regulation than others. Key issues include identifying 
risk-based criteria, such as a product's or institution's potential to 
create systemic problems, for determining the appropriate level of 
oversight for financial activities and institutions, including closing 
gaps that contributed to the current crisis. 

Characteristic: Systemwide focus; 
Description: Mechanisms should be included for identifying, monitoring, 
and managing risks to the financial system regardless of the source of 
the risk. Given that no regulator is currently tasked with this, key 
issues include determining how to effectively monitor market 
developments to identify potential risks; the degree, if any, to which 
regulatory intervention might be required; and who should hold such 
responsibilities. 

Characteristic: Flexible and adaptable; 
Description: A regulatory system that is flexible and forward looking 
allows regulators to readily adapt to market innovations and changes. 
Key issues include identifying and acting on emerging risks in a timely 
way without hindering innovation. 

Characteristic: Efficient and effective; 
Description: Effective and efficient oversight should be developed, 
including eliminating overlapping federal regulatory missions where 
appropriate, and minimizing regulatory burden without sacrificing 
effective oversight. Any changes to the system should be continually 
focused on improving the effectiveness of the financial regulatory 
system. Key issues include determining opportunities for consolidation 
given the large number of overlapping participants now, identifying the 
appropriate role of states and self-regulation, and ensuring a smooth 
transition to any new system. 

Characteristic: Consistent consumer and investor protection; 
Description: Consumer and investor protection should be included as 
part of the regulatory mission to ensure that market participants 
receive consistent, useful information, as well as legal protections 
for similar financial products and services, including disclosures, 
sales practice standards, and suitability requirements. Key issues 
include determining what amount, if any, of consolidation of 
responsibility may be necessary to streamline consumer protection 
activities across the financial services industry. 

Characteristic: Regulators provided with independence, prominence, 
authority, and accountability; 
Description: Regulators should have independence from inappropriate 
influence, as well as prominence and authority to carry out and enforce 
statutory missions, and be clearly accountable for meeting regulatory 
goals. With regulators with varying levels of prominence and funding 
schemes now, key issues include how to appropriately structure and fund 
agencies to ensure that each one's structure sufficiently achieves 
these characteristics. 

Characteristic: Consistent financial oversight; 
Description: Similar institutions, products, risks, and services should 
be subject to consistent regulation, oversight, and transparency, which 
should help minimize negative competitive outcomes while harmonizing 
oversight, both within the United States and internationally. Key 
issues include identifying activities that pose similar risks, and 
streamlining regulatory activities to achieve consistency. 

Characteristic: Minimal taxpayer exposure; 
Description: A regulatory system should foster financial markets that 
are resilient enough to absorb failures and thereby limit the need for 
federal intervention and limit taxpayers' exposure to financial risk. 
Key issues include identifying safeguards to prevent systemic crises 
and minimizing moral hazard. 

Source: GAO. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Related GAO Products: 

Financial Markets Regulation: Financial Crisis Highlights Need to 
Improve Oversight of Leverage at Financial Institutions and across 
System. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-739]. 
Washington, D.C.: Jul. 22, 2009. 

Fair Lending: Data Limitations and the Fragmented U.S. Financial 
Regulatory Structure Challenge Federal Oversight and Enforcement 
Efforts. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-704]. 
Washington, D.C.: Jul. 15, 2009. 

Hedge Funds: Overview of Regulatory Oversight, Counterparty Risks, and 
Investment Challenges. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-677T]. Washington, D.C.: May 7, 
2009. 

Financial Regulation: Review of Regulators' Oversight of Risk 
Management Systems at a Limited Number of Large, Complex Financial 
Institutions. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-499T]. 
Washington, D.C.: Mar. 18, 2009. 

Federal Financial Assistance: Preliminary Observations on Assistance 
Provided to AIG. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-490T]. 
Washington, D.C.: Mar. 18, 2009. 

Systemic Risk: Regulatory Oversight and Recent Initiatives to Address 
Risk Posed by Credit Default Swaps. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-397T]. Washington, D.C.: Mar. 5, 
2009. 

Bank Secrecy Act: Federal Agencies Should Take Action to Further 
Improve Coordination and Information-Sharing Efforts. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-227]. Washington, D.C.: Feb. 12, 
2009. 

Financial Regulation: A Framework for Crafting and Assessing Proposals 
to Modernize the Outdated U.S. Financial Regulatory System. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-216]. Washington, D.C.: Jan. 8, 
2009. 

Troubled Asset Relief Program: Additional Actions Needed to Better 
Ensure Integrity, Accountability, and Transparency. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-161]. Washington, D.C.: December 2, 
2008. 

Hedge Funds: Regulators and Market Participants Are Taking Steps to 
Strengthen Market Discipline, but Continued Attention Is Needed. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-200]. Washington, D.C.: 
January 24, 2008. 

Information on Recent Default and Foreclosure Trends for Home Mortgages 
and Associated Economic and Market Developments. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-78R]. Washington, D.C.: October 16, 
2007. 

Financial Regulation: Industry Trends Continue to Challenge the Federal 
Regulatory Structure. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-32]. Washington, D.C.: October 12, 
2007. 

Financial Market Regulation: Agencies Engaged in Consolidated 
Supervision Can Strengthen Performance Measurement and Collaboration. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-154]. Washington, D.C.: 
March 15, 2007. 

Alternative Mortgage Products: Impact on Defaults Remains Unclear, but 
Disclosure of Risks to Borrowers Could Be Improved. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-1021]. Washington, D.C.: September 
19, 2006. 

Credit Cards: Increased Complexity in Rates and Fees Heightens Need for 
More Effective Disclosures to Consumers. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-929]. Washington, D.C.: September 
12, 2006. 

Financial Regulation: Industry Changes Prompt Need to Reconsider U.S. 
Regulatory Structure. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-61]. Washington, D.C.: October 6, 
2004. 

Consumer Protection: Federal and State Agencies Face Challenges in 
Combating Predatory Lending. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-280]. Washington, D.C.: January 30, 
2004. 

Long-Term Capital Management: Regulators Need to Focus Greater 
Attention on Systemic Risk. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-00-3]. Washington, D.C.: October 
29, 1999. 

Financial Derivatives: Actions Needed to Protect the Financial System. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-94-133]. Washington, 
D.C.: May 18, 1994. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] GAO, Financial Regulation: A Framework for Crafting and Assessing 
Proposals to Modernize the Outdated U.S. Financial Regulatory System, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-216] (Washington, D.C.: 
Jan. 8, 2009). 

[2] GAO, High Risk Series: An Update, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-271] (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 2009). 

[3] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-216]. 

[4] GAO, Bank Oversight Structure: U.S. and Foreign Experience May 
Offer Lessons for Modernizing U.S. Structure, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-97-23] (Washington D.C.: Nov. 20, 
1996). 

[5] GAO, Financial Market Regulation: Agencies Engaged in Consolidated 
Supervision Can Strengthen Performance Measurement and Collaboration, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-154] (Washington, D.C.: 
Mar. 15, 2007). 

[6] GAO, Industrial Loan Corporations: Recent Asset Growth and 
Commercial Interest Highlight Differences in Regulatory Authority, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-621] (Washington, D.C.: 
Sept. 15, 2005). 

[7] GAO, Financial Regulation: Industry Changes Prompt Need to 
Reconsider U.S. Regulatory Structure, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-61] (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 6, 
2004). 

[8] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-154]. 

[9] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-227]. 

[10] GAO, Bank Secrecy Act: Federal Agencies Should Take Action to 
Further Improve Coordination and Information-Sharing Efforts, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-227] (Washington, D.C.: 
Feb. 12, 2009). 

[11] GAO, Fair Lending: Data Limitations and the Fragmented U.S. 
Financial Regulatory Structure Challenge Federal Oversight and 
Enforcement Efforts, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-704] (Washington, D.C.: Jul. 15, 
2009). 

[12] GAO, Systemic Risk: Regulatory Oversight and Recent Initiatives to 
Address Risk Posed by Credit Default Swaps, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-397T] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 5, 
2009). 

[13] GAO, Hedge Funds: Overview of Regulatory Oversight, Counterparty 
Risks, and Investment Challenges, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-677T] (Washington, D.C.: May 7, 
2009). 

[14] GAO, Financial Regulation: Review of Regulators' Oversight of Risk 
Management Systems at a Limited Number of Large, Complex Financial 
Institutions, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-499T] 
(Washington, D.C.: Mar. 18, 2009). 

[15] GAO, Financial Markets Regulation: Financial Crisis Highlights 
Need to Improve Oversight of Leverage at Financial Institutions and 
across System, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-739] 
(Washington, D.C.: Jul. 22, 2009). 

[16] G-20 Working Group 1, Enhancing Sound Regulation and Strengthening 
Transparency, March 25, 2009 and Bank for International Settlements, 
79th Annual Report (Basel, Switzerland, Jun. 12, 2009). The Group of 
30, Financial Reform: A Framework for Financial Stability (Washington, 
D.C.: Jan. 15, 2009). Committee on Capital Markets Regulation, The 
Global Financial Crisis, A Plan for Regulatory Reform (May 2009). 

[17] While we chose countries that use the integrated and twin peaks 
approaches, other approaches to financial regulation exist. 

[18] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-216]. 

[19] A New Foundation: Rebuilding Financial Supervision and Regulation 
provides outlines the Administration's proposal and draft legislation 
provides additional specific information. Mr. Spencer Bachus and others 
introduced H.R. 3310, the Consumer Protection and Regulatory 
Enhancement Act of 2009--a proposal on behalf of House Republicans--on 
July 23, 2009. 

[20] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-216]. 

[End of section] 

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