WASHINGTON — U.S. Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew says any efforts to delay the writing of rules to put the 2010 financial overhaul law into effect could leave big banks in a position to threaten the financial system's stability.
Lew said that means policymakers may have to consider new approaches. His comments came Wednesday at a conference organized by the cable TV network CNBC.
In his address to the conference, Lew stressed that the legislation provided strong safeguards for consumers and investors, and, at least on paper, ended the idea that any financial firm is too big not to be rescued by the government. "Banking will always involve some degree of risk-taking, and the goal is not to eliminate all risk in banking," he said. "But now if a financial firm fails, taxpayers will not have to bear the cost of that failure."
However, when asked after the speech about the effectiveness of the new rules, Lew said delaying implementation or weakening them could still hamper the effort to prevent another financial crisis.
If rules putting the law in place aren't sufficient by year's end to reduce the risk of big banks failing and endangering the financial system, Lew said, "We're going to have to look at other options." Lew didn't specify what the options might be.
Next week marks the third anniversary of the overhaul law, enacted in response to the crisis, which is intended to prevent another meltdown and a federal bailout of banks. Amid lobbying by the Wall Street banks and other business interests, regulators have weakened some of the rules as they have drafted them. Fewer than half the rules to be written by the bank and securities-market regulators have been formally adopted.
Hundreds of U.S. banks, including the country's biggest banks, received taxpayer bailouts during the financial crisis that struck in 2008 and triggered the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression of the 1930s.
Lew said Wednesday the Obama administration, like a group of senators who recently proposed legislation that would break up banks, wants to ensure that risky banks can't bring down the system. He didn't specifically endorse the legislation.