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Meltdown reveals how the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau was
able to curb important unsafe and unfair practices that led to the
recent financial crisis. In interviews with key government,
industry, and advocacy groups along with deep archival research,
Kirsch and Squires show where the CFPB was able to overcome many
abusive practices, where it was less able to do so, and why. Open
for business in 2011, the CFPB was Congress's response to the
financial catastrophe that shattered millions of middle-class and
lower-income households and threatened the stability of the global
economy. But only a few years later, with U.S. economic conditions
on a path to recovery, there are already disturbing signs of the
(re)emergence of the high-risk, high-reward credit practices that
the CFPB was designed to curb. This book profiles how the Bureau
has attempted to stop abusive and discriminatory lending practices
in the mortgage and automobile lending sectors and documents the
multilayered challenges faced by an untested new regulatory agency
in its efforts to transform the broken—but lucrative—business
practices of the financial services industry. Authors Kirsch and
Squires raise the question of whether the consumer protection
approach to financial services reform will succeed over the long
term in light of political and business efforts to scuttle it. Case
studies of mortgage and automobile lending reforms highlight the
key contextual and structural conditions that explain the CFPB's
ability to transform financial service industry business models and
practices. Meltdown: The Financial Crisis, Consumer Protection, and
the Road Forward is essential reading for a wide audience,
including anyone involved in the provision of financial services,
staff of financial services and consumer protection regulatory
agencies, and fair lending and consumer protection advocates. Its
accessible presentation of financial information will also serve
students and general readers.
This provocative and accessible narrative recounts the inside story
of how a broad-based people's campaign was mobilized and
subsequently succeeded in pushing Congress to create a consumer
financial regulator with clout. What would Congress do-if
anything-to tame Wall Street and the nation's lenders following the
financial meltdown of 2008? This book tells the true story of how
an alliance of consumer, civil rights, labor, fair lending, and
other progressive groups emerged to effectively challenge Wall
Street and its official protectors and to win substantial new
legislative reforms-actions that resulted in the Dodd-Frank Act and
its path-breaking Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB).
Based largely on in-depth interviews with the leading activists
involved in the campaign, Financial Justice: The People's Campaign
to Stop Lender Abuse taps into the world of contemporary citizen
movements to present evidence into the conditions that determine
the success and failure of social movement campaigns. It goes well
beyond general, global variables, such as "effective management,"
to show how the formal and informal rules adopted by a campaign can
serve to preclude fragmentation and incoherence.
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