US House approves financial reforms

    The US House of Representatives has approved the most extensive reform of the financial sector since the Great Depression of the 1930s.
    Politicians voted 223-202 to pass the legislation, a key goal of Barack Obama, the US president, in response to the global financial meltdown of 2008.
    "This legislation brings us another important step closer to necessary, comprehensive financial reform that will create clear rules of the road, consistent and systematic enforcement of those rules, and a stronger, more stable financial system," Obama said in a statement on Friday.
    "We have a responsibility to learn from it [the financial crisis] and to put in place reforms that will promote sound investment, encourage real competition and innovation and prevent such a crisis from ever happening again," he said.
    The legislation would give the government new powers to break up companies that threaten the economy and dismantle them in a way that ensures shareholders and unsecured creditors, not taxpayers, bear the losses.

    Consumer protection

    It would also lead to the creation of a new agency that would take over consumer
    protection powers from current banking regulators, and examine more closely financial markets that have escaped the oversight of regulators.
    It also reinforces the powers of the Securities and Exchange Commission to detect irregularities that could provide an early warning of fraudulent investment schemes.
    The legislation aims to prevent manipulation and bring transparency to the
    $600 trillion global derivatives market.
    It would give the Federal Reserve more powers to oversee large companies at risk of collapse, but also give the Government Accountability Office, the investigative arm of the US congress, more power over the Federal Reserve itself.
    The bill has drawn fierce opposition from the financial sector and from Republicans, all of whom voted against it.
    The US senate will have to pass the bill before Obama can sign it.


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