Paul Volcker
- 1979-1987 - Federal Reserve, Chair, August 1979 to August 1987
- 2009-2011 - Economic Recovery Advisory Board, Chair, February 2009 until January 2011.
- Volcker Rule
- fraser.stlouisfed.org/archival-collection/paul-a-volcker-papers-5297
- volckeralliance.org/profiles/paul-volcker
- 2015 - Volcker Alliance - Prior Proposals to Consolidate Federal Financial Regulators - 188p
- National Commission on the Public Service
- Report of the National Commission on the Public Service, T-GGD-89-19, Published: Apr 27, 1989. Publicly Released: Apr 27, 1989. - gao.gov/products/t-ggd-89-19
- nytimes.com/1987/07/24/business/volcker-plans-to-head-panel.html
- 1987 01 - GOV (Senate) - Title-? - (CSPAN) - Current Banking Issues
- [PDF-?, VIDEO-CSPAN]
- (CSPAN) - Witnesses testified on the solvency of banks and other financial services institutions
- Note: This is an incomplete program.
- Paul Volcker, Shelby, Dodd,
- Paul Volcker - Testimony - 29p
- Senate - Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee
- 2009 0924 - GOV (Senate) - Systemic Risk and Resolution Issues / Experts’ Perspectives on Systemic Risk and Resolution Issues
- [PDF-128p, VIDEO-CSPAN]
- (p7) - Paul Volcker - ".....insurance companies, which I would say parenthetically I hope better regulatory systems will be developed, maybe not as part of this legislation but next year."
- Dinallo thinks that we should look at insurance regulation as a model for what was done right in the financial crisis (responding to criticism from Volcker about failures in state regulation).
2010 0610 - FCIC - FCIC memo of staff interview with Eric Dinallo, (Former New York Insurance Commissioner) - [link-Download]
- approx 23:00 - Paul Volcker - I have a little hobby of asking friends and acquaintances when they talk to me with experience in financial markets,
- I say, now, outside of commercial banks, outside of insurance companies, which I would say parenthetically I hope better regulatory systems will be developed, maybe not as part of this legislation but next year.
- Apart from commercial banks and insurance companies, how many genuinely systemically important institutions do you think there are in the whole world, financial markets.
- I will tell you the answer I get consistently is somewhere between 5 and 25.
- The universe is not huge when you are talking about non-banking, non-insurance company, systemically important institutions.
2009 0924 - GOV (Senate) - Systemic Risk and Resolution Issues / Experts’ Perspectives on Systemic Risk and Resolution Issues - [PDF-128p, VIDEO-CSPAN]
- (ACLI) Re: Policy Loan Developments of 15 Life Insurance Companies
- The purpose of the meeting was to discuss concerns about the liquidity conditions and the possibilities of future adverse developments.
- The company people wanted to be sure that Mr. Volcker was fully aware of the potentials of the situation and to arrange a liaison between his staff and the staff of the Council and this aim was accomplished.
- In the meantime, we have begun to explore the means by which the resources of the business might be applied to alleviate any temporary extreme liquidity problems that might arise for a particular member company.
- [Bonk: PaulVolcker = Chairman of the Federal Reserve]
1980-2, NAIC Proceedings
- 2009 0925 - GOV (House) - H.R. 1207, the Federal Reserve Transparency Act of 2009, Financial Regulatory Overhaul (CSPAN) - [PDF-223p, VIDEO-CSPAN]
- Scott Alvarez (FRB)
- Barney Frank (D-MA): language is important
- Ron Paul - Call for GAO to look at Federal Reserve
- (p13) - Statement of Scott G. Alvarez, General Counsel, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
- However, Congress purposely and for good reason excluded monetary policy matters, including open market and discount window operations, from GAO review.
- Considerable experience shows that monetary policy independence, within a framework of legislatively established objectives and public accountability, tends to yield a monetary policy that best promotes price stability and economic growth. H.R. 1207 would subject monetary policy matters to GAO audit.
- Financial market participants likely would see this as a substantial erosion of the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy independence.
- This would tend to undermine public and investor confidence in monetary policy by raising concerns that monetary policy judgments would become subject to political considerations.
- (p38) - Mr. ALVAREZ (FRB). GAO audits government agencies, and you want the audit of a private entity.
- I think that is something that Congress would have to change the authority of the GAO to allow.
- (p39) - Ed Royce (R-CA) - ref: Volcker Testimony the day before
- In his testimony to the House Financial Services Committee, Mr. Volcker said—and I am just reading from Bloomberg News, but we heard him say it yesterday—
- ‘‘Such a designation would imply government readiness to support the firms in a crisis, encouraging even more risky behavior in a phenomenon known as ‘moral hazard.’’’
- Would you like to comment on Paul Volcker’s opposition to having the Fed walk down this road with the Administration and his concern about the consequences of that moral hazard?
- In his testimony to the House Financial Services Committee, Mr. Volcker said—and I am just reading from Bloomberg News, but we heard him say it yesterday—
- 2009 0924 - GOV (Senate) - Systemic Risk and Resolution Issues / Experts’ Perspectives on Systemic Risk and Resolution Issues - [PDF-128p, VIDEO-CSPAN]
- Paul Volcker - ".....insurance companies, which I would say parenthetically I hope better regulatory systems will be developed, maybe not as part of this legislation but next year." (p7)
- Paul Volcker - "I would hope this committee would look at the question of national charters for insurance companies and bring them under—at least the big ones—under a framework so that something like AIG with similar problems can’t arise in the future." (p19)
- Mr. PERLMUTTER. How do we resolve insurance companies? Do you know? We liquidate them through the insurance commissioner. (p49)
- 2009 0204 - GOV (Senate) - Modernizing the U.S. Financial Regulatory System - [CSPAN-Video
- High-Risk Activities by Banks - VIDEO