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4/21/12

Banking Industry: US Top Fed Official says: “The Moment Is Now” to Break Up Big Banks

The US’s largest banks are “a perversion of capitalism” and “a clear and present danger to the U.S. economy.” The Dodd-Frank financial reform legislation passed in the wake of the crisis “may actually perpetuate an already dangerous trend of increasing banking industry concentration.”

These arguments come not from an Occupy Wall Street activist, not from a Tea Party member, but from a scathing report released last week by one of the nation’s top banking regulators, the Federal Reserve Board of Dallas. In a column for ProPublica and The New York Times, reporter Jesse Eisenger described the report as “a radical indictment of the nation’s financial system.”

FRONTLINE sat down on Saturday with the Dallas Fed CEO and president, former banker Richard W. Fisher, to talk about the report and its core argument about “too big to fail” institutions. According to their calculation, the five biggest commercial banks — JPMorgan, Bank of America, Citigroup, Wells Fargo and U.S. Bancorp — hold 52 percent of all U.S. deposits, which means the “too big to fail” problem is with us now more than ever.

In The Warning, PBS FRONTLINE unearths the hidden history of the nation’s worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. At the center of it all is Brooksley Born, the head of an obscure federal regulatory agency — the Commodity Futures Trading Commission [CFTC] — who not only warned of the potential for economic meltdown in the late 1990s, but also tried to convince the country’s key economic powerbrokers to regulate the secretive, multitrillion-dollar derivatives market, whose crash helped trigger the financial collapse in the fall of 2008. In The Warning, she speaks for the first time on television.

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For more: Top Fed Official: “The Moment Is Now” to Break Up Big Banks | Money, Power and Wall Street | FRONTLINE | PBS

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