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June 21, 2023

AAF Chairman Marc Short Statement on Scott-Brown Bill Recoup Act

“Earlier this year we witnessed the failure and subsequent taxpayer bailout of three federally regulated banks as a result of regulators asleep at the wheel,” said AAF Chair Marc Short. “Senator Warren introduced a bill allowing bank regulators to claw back executive pay when banks fail, and now Senator Sherrod Brown and Senator Tim Scott have introduced a bill that is virtually identical and, in some ways, worse. These two bills are cut from the same cloth and their effects would be equally damaging to the private sector. The Scott-Brown bill would expand the role of government in the private sector, introducing greater corporate governance requirements and layers of bureaucracy. Though the addition of Senator Sinema’s amendment helps address some of the federal mismanagement, conservatives should still be looking for ways to reduce the heavy hand of the federal government in its approach to bank failures.”

AAF RECOUP Act Memo

Topline: The Brown-Scott clawback bill would give bank regulators arbitrary authority to claw back executive pay when banks fail but does nothing to hold regulators accountable for sleeping on the job.

Background

Earlier this year, we witnessed the failure of two federally regulated commercial banks (Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank) as a result of federal mismanagement and regulators asleep at the wheel in the midst of historic inflation and rising interest rates induced by a government spending spree.

The government response was pitiful in everything but the price point, and completely counterproductive to the task of preventing future failures.

By bailing out these banks, including the deposits of many Chinese companies that were SVB customers, the Biden administration continues the Obama administration’s policy of promoting moral hazard.

In the wake of SVB’s collapse, anti-bank Bolsheviks like Senator Elizabeth Warren tried to ram their progressive policies through Congress but were thwarted by commonsense.

Now, in their own “response” to these bank failures, Senate Banking Chair Sherrod Brown and Ranking Member Tim Scott have introduced a “Warren-lite” executive compensation clawback.

RECOUP Act – Background

Gives the FDIC discretion to claw back up to two years of compensation for the executives of failed depository institutions (exempting lenders with less than $10 billion in assets). This is just shy of Senator Warren’s proposed three-year clawback period.

Raises the civil money penalty for reckless behavior causing a substantial loss to a depository institution from $1 million to $3 million. Senator Warren’s bill contains no such provision.

Introduces new Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) mandates, forcing banks to comply with additional unnecessary regulations.

RECOUP Act – Impact

This bill does nothing to address and preempt the causes of bank failures and instead punishes private companies for their own business decisions. Rather than focusing on the roles of a mismanaged Federal Reserve and a crushing regulatory regime, this legislation merely serves as a slap on the wrist to a small subset of bank executives. Additionally, this legislation would seek to codify ESG mandates that further the policy priorities of the Left through corporate governance with little to no legislative oversight.

Instead of supporting legislation that serves as a vehicle for progressive policy priorities, conservatives should address and preempt the causes of bank failures, starting with the catastrophic mismanagement of the Fed. This should include heavy scrutiny of the Fed’s dual mandate and its special exemptions from federal oversight.

Resources
Advancing American Opportunity (Advancing American Freedom)
Pence Blasts Biden Bank Bailout (Daily Mail)

Contact John Shelton (jshelton@advancingamericanfreedom.com) with any questions.