It's hard to believe because RPBs seem to like ANY Federal agency - oh say, the Minerals Management Service -
that ISN'T doing a very good job overseeing whatever private sector activity they're supposed to be watching.
But maybe even the RPBs think the financial sector needs a tad more attention from their regulators - a major one of which, altho not the only one, being the SEC -
And so they've issued a report that's surprisingly critical of what had been a favorite lapdog of Cheney / Bush, at least according to this item in the Atlantic On-Line.
The Republican wing of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, lead by Rep. Darrell Issa (R-CA), released the document criticizing the regulator.
It provides 10 findings of inadequacy and provides five recommendations for improvement.
The report explains that the SEC's problems are fundamental in nature, so deep reform is necessary.
So where did the SEC go wrong?
If you haven't seen anything screwed up in the financial markets over the past few years, then you really haven't been paying attention.
They missed a few big Ponzi schemes, including those run by Bernard Madoff and R. Allen Stanford.
They didn't do their job to adequately oversee investment banks, which partially led to the collapse of a few and the near-demise of them all.
They also missed the opportunity to eliminate gray areas or wrongdoing that existed in the financial markets that helped create the financial crisis.
As you might guess, some of the findings had to do with precisely these failings.
But a lot of them are boilerplate Republican complaints, so we suggest you take most of these with a BIG grain of salt,
especially the last five, and, above all, the last one, which basically undercuts whatever positive thrust the previous 9 might have had ;-) .
Here are all 10 (summarized):
How does the report say these problems should be remedied?
It recommends Congress requires the SEC to do the following (also summarized):
Considering the regulator's massive failures over the past decade, these requirements sound hardly revolutionary, if not downright tepid.