ANALYSIS: The Dodd-Frank Five-Year Anniversary Is as Bad as We Thought It Would Be

By Published on July 20, 2015

When the Dodd-Frank Act took effect on July 21, 2010, critics were fast to predict that the 2,300 page-long legislation, which passed the House without a single Republican vote and received only three GOP votes in the Senate would fail. Tomorrow will mark the five-year anniversary of Dodd-Frank and its unfortunate distorting effects. Just as when it was passed, the legislation remains unable to address the problems it was intended to. The legislation has overwhelmed the regulatory system, stifled the financial industry, impaired economic growth, and done nothing to correct the pernicious effects of “too big to fail.” But that’s only the beginning: Many more of its regulations still need to be written, some several years down the road, all of which injects massive uncertainty into the financial industry.

Read the article “ANALYSIS: The Dodd-Frank Five-Year Anniversary Is as Bad as We Thought It Would Be” on nationalreview.com.

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