The liberty principle for this
Freedom Friday concerns the freedom to succeed or to fail in business. After
the financial crash of 2008, Congress passed the Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act, otherwise known as the Dodd-Frank bill. According to
Norbert Michel, this bill did not reform Wall Street or protect consumers. It merely propped up
failing businesses that were “too big to fail” and put more regulations on
them.
Heritage Action for America explains why the Dodd-Frank bill was not good for the economy or Americans.
This paragraph explains why the 2008 recession lasted for so long.
Along with imposing 3,500-plus pages of
new rules and regulations on the financial industry, Dodd-Frank codifies “too
big to fail” policy, runs local community banks out of business, restricts
access to credit for investors and home buyers, raises lending costs, and
reduces access to capital for small businesses. It also created one of the most
powerful and unaccountable federal agencies – the Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau (CFPB). Evidence shows Dodd-Frank is one of the major factors
responsible for the country’s historically slow economic recovery.
By sending conservatives to Congress
and a Republican to the White House, Americans told Washington that they wanted
changes. Apparently, some of the people in Washington have been listening
because Congress is now working on a bill known as the CHOICE Act. Representative Trey Hollingsworth (R. Indiana) says that under this Act, “small community banks will be able to serve their communities
as they once did – without excessive burdens from regulators that stifle growth
and restrict the access to capital” and “hold Washington accountable.”
The CHOICE Act has been a long time
in the making, but it sounds like it will help small businesses bring
prosperity back to the United States. Through passing this Act, Congress will
bring the freedom to succeed or fail back to Americans without the use of taxpayer
money propping up businesses that are “to big to fail.”
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