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An honest debate over our "too big to fail" problem and a sound policy response are incompatible with a wait-and-see approach to the laws already on the books.
April 9 -
Making home loans that aren't "qualified mortgages" will soon carry legal risk. Will making only QM loans expose lenders to fair-lending claims under the disparate impact doctrine? Washington must clarify.
February 28 -
The qualified mortgage rule issued by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau could be disruptive to the FHA single-family program, so the Department of Housing and Urban Development is starting the process of issuing its own QM rule.
March 1
Community bankers have never been shy about expressing our frustrations with the multitudes of regulatory requirements we face on a daily basis. From the seemingly endless paperwork to the redundant disclosures that often cause more confusion than they resolve, regulatory hurdles can be truly overwhelming, and we don't mind telling people about it.
But you know it's really bad when the regulators themselves can't even get their own policies straight. And with so many mandates coming from so many different Washington regulators, that's exactly what is happening. The regulations from Washington are not only seemingly endless, they are also often contradictory.
Take, for example, new
I understand the principle of fair lending. Nevertheless, the new rules are a complete, 180-degree turn from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's new standards on "qualified mortgages". The
Following the housing and financial crises, I understand this sentiment as well. But the policy priorities of restricting credit to minimize potential losses and of boosting lending to ensure equitable access to credit are directly at odds, and lenders are stuck in a regulatory Catch-22. Together, the rules could expose community banks making only QM loans to disparate impact legal actions. In a recent
This frenzied approach to policymaking is not simply exasperating to community bankers and other financial services professionals. It's not just another laughable example of regulatory overreach or big government fumbling. These conflicting principles have real consequences for lenders and borrowers alike.
Excessive regulatory compliance inhibits the ability of community banks and others to devote resources to their businesses. It requires staff to spend more of their time on meeting regulatory guidelines than on working with customers and driving community development. And community banks are not in a position to go on a hiring spree to meet every new regulation that comes down the pike. As the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
Instead of driving community banks out of business with strict and conflicting regulatory standards, policymakers should support the kind of relationship lending that defines the community banking business model. For many community banks, and other financial institutions, the regulatory environment has reached a tipping point.
Camden R. Fine is president and CEO of the Independent Community Bankers of America.