AFTERWORD

I don’t wake up mornings wishing that I were still Treasury secretary. For one thing, I am finally getting a good night’s sleep again. I hope as the markets settle down and the economy begins to recover that that is also true for the millions of people in America—and throughout the world—who have been living through this long nightmare of home foreclosures, job losses, and tight credit since the onset of the financial crisis in 2007.

Certainly I miss my team at the Treasury Department and my other colleagues in government. Even on the worst days, I took comfort from knowing that I was working with some of the sharpest and most creative minds in the country—men and women who had chosen public service over personal enrichment. And I do regret that I am unable either to help with the “exit strategy” to end the emergency programs we put in place to save the financial system or to work within the government for urgently needed regulatory reforms.

When I became Treasury secretary in July 2006, financial crises weren’t new to me, nor were the failures of major financial institutions. I had witnessed serious market disturbances and the collapses, or near collapses, of Continental Illinois Bank, Drexel Burnham Lambert, and Salomon Brothers, among others. With the exception of the savings and loan debacle, these disruptions generally focused on a single financial organization, such as the hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management in 1998.

The crisis that began in 2007 was far more severe, and the risks to the economy and the American people much greater. Between March and September 2008, eight major U.S. financial institutions failed—Bear Stearns, IndyMac, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Lehman Brothers, AIG, Washington Mutual, and Wachovia—six of them in September alone. And the damage was not limited to the U.S. More than 20 European banks, across 10 countries, were rescued from July 2007 through February 2009. This, the most wrenching financial crisis since the Great Depression, caused a terrible recession in the U.S. and severe harm around the world. Yet it could have been so much worse. Had it not been for unprecedented interventions by the U.S. and other governments, many more financial institutions would have gone under—and the economic damage would have been far greater and longer lasting.

By early 2009, it was clear that our actions had prevented a meltdown. Coupled with initiatives from the Federal Reserve and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the programs we designed and implemented at Treasury—along with those advanced by the Obama administration, which were largely continuations or logical extensions of ours—had stabilized the financial system, restarted credit markets, and helped to limit the housing collapse. Even before I left office in January 2009, the major banks were gaining strength, and many would soon have access once again to the equity and debt markets.

Among these actions, an innovative guarantee staved off a meltdown of money market funds. The Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, which Treasury conceived and designed jointly with the Fed, has been successful in reestablishing the securitization marketplace for consumer finance in areas such as credit card and auto receivables. And our decision to put Fannie and Freddie into conservatorship ensured the availability of affordable loans for new homebuyers and for those refinancing their mortgages. This was by far the single most important step taken to counter the price declines in housing, a sector critical to our recovery.

We also had a significant impact on foreclosure mitigations by mobilizing and coordinating the private sector to adopt common loan modification plans. We encouraged fierce competitors to cooperate with one another and to work closely with financial counselors to get troubled homeowners to pick up the phone to contact their mortgage servicers. Overall, we ramped up the pace of loan modifications and spared hundreds of thousands of families from the hardship of losing their homes. (The counseling group we supported, known for its 888-995-HOPE toll-free line, was integrated by the Obama administration into its own program.)

And, of course, our decision to take preferred-equity stakes in financial institutions through the capital purchase program—paired with debt guarantees from the FDIC—succeeded in stabilizing the reeling banking industry. Altogether nearly 700 healthy banks, big and small, took advantage of the program, which invested $205 billion in these institutions. I believe the taxpayer will make money on these bank investments. We had originally estimated that up to 3,000 banks might participate, bolstering their capacity to lend. Unfortunately, the political backlash that erupted against institutions’ taking TARP money led many banks to withdraw their applications and discouraged others from submitting theirs.

I came to Washington as an advocate of free markets, and I remain one. The interventions we undertook I would have found abhorrent at any other time. I make no apology for them, however. As first responders to an unprecedented crisis that threatened the destruction of the modern financial system, we had little choice. We were forced to use the often inadequate tools we had on hand—or, as I often remarked to my team at Treasury, the duct tape and baling wire of an outdated regulatory regime with limited powers and authorities.

Our actions were intended to be temporary. If we don’t get the government out as soon as is practical, we will do grave harm to our economy. Yes, our first priority has to be recovery. But it is equally important that we exit these programs. This is critical to our own continued economic success.

The history of capitalism in America has been one of striking the right balance between profit-driven market forces and the array of regulations and laws necessary to harness these forces for the common good. In recent years, regulation failed to keep pace with rapid innovations in the markets—from the proliferation of increasingly complex and opaque products to the accelerating globalization of finance—with disastrous consequences.

In my time in Washington, I learned that, unfortunately, it takes a crisis to get difficult and important things done. Many had warned for years of impending calamity at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, but only when those institutions faced outright collapse did lawmakers enact reforms. Only after Lehman Brothers failed did we get the authorities from Congress to inject capital into financial institutions. Even then, despite the horrific conditions in the markets, TARP was rejected the first time it came up for a vote in the U.S. House of Representatives. And, amazingly enough, as I write this, more than one year after Lehman’s fall, U.S. government regulators still lack the power to wind down a nonbank financial institution outside of bankruptcy.

I am not sure what the solution is for this ever more troubling political dysfunction, but it is certain that we must find a way to improve the collective decision-making process in Washington. The stakes are simply too high not to. Indeed, we are fortunate that in 2008 Congress did act before the financial system collapsed. This took strong leadership in both the House and the Senate, because all who voted for TARP or to give us the emergency authorities to deal with Fannie and Freddie knew they were casting an unpopular vote.

Since I’ve left Treasury I’m often approached by people eager to hear about my experiences. Most often they have two basic questions for me: What was it like to live through the crisis? And what lessons did I learn that could help us avoid a similar calamity in the future?

I hope the book you’ve been reading answers the first question. The answer to the second question is obviously complex, but as I have thought about this over the last year or so, I would narrow down the many lessons into four crucial ones:

1. The structural economic imbalances among the major economies of the world that led to massive cross-border capital flows are an important source of the justly criticized excesses in our financial system. These imbalances lay at the root of the crisis. Simply put, in the U.S. we save much less than we consume. This forces us to borrow large amounts of money from oil-exporting countries or from Asian nations, like China and Japan, with high savings rates and low shares of domestic consumption. The crisis has abated, but these imbalances persist and must be addressed.

2. Our regulatory system remains a hopelessly outmoded patchwork quilt built for another day and age. It is rife with duplication, gaping holes, and counterproductive competition among regulators. The system hasn’t kept pace with financial innovation and needs to be fixed so that we have the capacity and the authority to respond to constantly evolving global capital markets.

3. The financial system contained far too much leverage, as evidenced by inadequate cushions of both capital and liquidity. Much of the leverage was embedded in largely opaque and highly complex financial products. Today it is generally understood that banks and investment banks in the U.S., Europe, and the rest of the world did not have enough capital. Less well understood is the important role that liquidity needs to play in bolstering the safety and stability of banks. The credit crisis exposed widespread reliance on poor liquidity practices, notably a dependence on unstable short-term funding. Financial institutions that rely heavily on short-term borrowings need to have plenty of cash on hand for bad times. And many didn’t. Inadequate liquidity cushions, I believe, were a bigger problem than inadequate capital levels.

4. The largest financial institutions are so big and complex that they pose a dangerously large risk. Today the top 10 financial institutions in the U.S. hold close to 60 percent of financial assets, up from 10 percent in 1990. This dramatic concentration, coupled with much greater interconnectedness, means that the failure of any of a few very large institutions can take down a big part of the system, and, in domino fashion, topple the rest. The concept of “too big to fail” has moved from the academic literature to reality and must be addressed.

There are a number of steps we should take to deal with these issues. To start, we should adjust U.S. policies to reduce the global imbalances that have been decried for years by many prominent economists. If, as a consequence of our current economic problems, American citizens begin to save more and spend less, we ought to welcome and encourage this change. We should go further and remove the bias in our tax code against saving—in effect moving toward a tax code based on consumption rather than income. The system we have today taxes the return on savings, giving incentives to spend rather than to save. Moving to a consumption tax would remove the bias against saving and help boost investment and job creation while reducing our dependence on foreign capital.

Our government needs to tackle its number one economic challenge, which is reducing its fiscal deficit. Our ability to meet this challenge will to a large extent determine our future economic success. We are now on a path where deficits will rise to a point at which we may simply be unable to raise the necessary revenues even if significant tax increases are imposed on the middle class. Dealing with this problem requires moving quickly to reform our major entitlement programs: Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security. Any such reform needs to be done in a manner that recognizes and addresses the $43 trillion of built-in deficits that the GAO is projecting over the next 75 years. These will only become more difficult to deal with as time goes by. The longer we wait, the greater will be the burden on the next generation.

Striking the right balance to achieve both effective regulation and market discipline is another huge challenge we face. The recent crisis demonstrated that our financial markets had outgrown the ability of our current system to regulate them. Regulatory reforms alone would not have prevented all of the problems that emerged. However, a better framework that featured less duplication and that restricted the ability of financial firms to pick and choose their own, generally less-strict, regulators—a practice known as regulatory arbitrage—would have worked much better. And there is no doubt in my mind that the lack of a regulator to identify and manage systemic risks contributed greatly to the problems we faced.

We need a system that can adapt as financial institutions, financial products, and markets continue to evolve. Before the crisis forced us to shift from making long-range recommendations to fighting fires, Treasury conducted a thorough analysis of the proper objectives of financial services regulation, and this exercise led us to sweeping proposals for fundamental reforms. These recommendations were controversial when they were issued in March 2008, but in retrospect seem quite prophetic.

Among other things, we proposed a system that created a government responsibility for systemic risk identification and oversight. We recommended strengthening and consolidating safety and soundness regulation to eliminate redundancy and counterproductive regulatory arbitrage. Acknowledging the proliferation of financial products—and the abuses that have accompanied them—we also proposed a separate and distinct business conduct regulator to protect consumers and investors.

There is a well-recognized need for a global accord requiring banks to have higher levels of better-quality capital. This will be more difficult to achieve for some of the more highly leveraged European banks, but consistency here is important, and a stronger capital position will allow the banks to lend more in a downturn, when credit is most needed. Regulators must also require bigger liquidity cushions, and these, too, must be harmonized globally. A simplistic one-size-fits-all model will not work for liquidity. Bank managements and regulators need to have a better understanding of the potential liquidity demands, which will vary bank by bank, under adverse conditions.

With a $60 trillion global economy and a $14 trillion U.S. economy, it is inevitable that we will have a number of very large financial institutions whose increasing size and complexity are driven by customer demands in a global marketplace. Inside the U.S., which still has 8,000 relatively small banks along with its many big institutions, competitive pressures will also force the industry to continue to consolidate. Just as many people shop at Wal-Mart while mourning the disappearance of their local retailers, so, too, will they find their way to bigger commercial banks offering a wider range of lower-cost services and products than smaller banks do. The institutions that are emerging to satisfy all of these needs are complex, difficult to manage and regulate, and pose real risks that must be confronted.

There is no question that tighter, and one trusts better, regulation is coming. I hope and expect that big institutions will be regulated in a way that considers the risks resulting from their size and from acquisitions or new business lines that make them riskier and further complicate the already difficult task of managing them effectively.

However, regulation alone cannot eliminate instability, and we will inevitably be confronted with the failure of another large, complex institution. The challenge is to strengthen market discipline as a tool to force institutions to address problems before they become impossible to solve and to design a means of absorbing a large failure without the entire financial system’s being threatened. As I have said repeatedly, we need more authority to deal with, and wind down, failing institutions that are not banks. The current bankruptcy process is clearly inadequate for large, complex organizations, as the failure of Lehman Brothers demonstrated.

I shudder at the thought of any future administration’s having to cope with another crisis hobbled by the constraints that we faced. For this reason, I favor broad authorities to deal with the failure of a systemically important institution—including the power to inject capital and to make emergency loans. Some critics may say that such powers would only increase the risk of moral hazard, but I am confident that procedural safeguards can be put in place to help manage such concerns and to mitigate market distortions.

Wind-down authority must be constructed to impose real costs on creditors, investors, and the financial franchises themselves so that market discipline can continue to be a constructive force in the regulation of large, complex firms. However wind-down authority is devised, it will affect market practices and credit decisions. To minimize uncertainty in the market, the government should provide clear guidance as to how it would use this enhanced authority. And a very high bar should be set before it is used, similar to the constraints that are placed on the FDIC before it liquidates—or, in technical terms, “resolves”—commercial banks.

The successful management of large, diversified financial institutions also demands the presence of strong, independent risk and control functions as well as compensation policies that do not promote excessive risk taking. Risk management, compliance, control, and audit functions are underappreciated and very difficult jobs that must be considered to be as important as those of the revenue-generating traders within an organization. These risk professionals must hold the upper hand in any dispute. This can only be accomplished if the organization has a culture that respects these essential jobs and demonstrates as much by offering a career track and compensation structure that attracts and keeps outstanding talent.

There is now a recognition that regulators need to work with the financial industry to set pay standards, but this can and should be done without regulators’ determining specific compensation levels. Instead, pay should be aligned with shareholder interests by ensuring that as an employee’s total compensation grows, an increasing amount of it is given out as equity that is deferred—vesting and paying out later—and subject to being clawed back under certain circumstances.

Senior executives should be prevented from selling most, if not all, of the shares they are paid; when they retire or leave, their deferred shares should be paid out on a predetermined schedule and not accelerated. It is critically important that those running financial institutions today recognize the understandable outrage about the costs that have been inflicted by the crisis on the public and the taxpayer. It is incumbent upon these executives to show real restraint in their own compensation as an example of leadership that will strengthen the culture of their firms.

Determining the future of housing policy will be among the most difficult political issues, and it will require a decision on the future of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. These institutions, which were at the heart of the U.S. policies that overstimulated housing in the past, cannot stay in conservatorship forever. They remain the primary source of low-cost mortgage financing in the U.S. But as the housing and mortgage markets recover, the Fed’s support for the GSEs will end, and private capital will return. Fannie and Freddie should not then be allowed to revert to their old form, crowding out private competition and putting taxpayers on the hook for failure while shareholders benefit from success.

At a minimum, the GSEs should be restructured to eliminate the systemic risk they posed. An easy way to address this is to shrink them by reducing their investment portfolios—and their huge debt loads. I also believe that their mission should be curtailed significantly to reduce the subsidy for homeownership that helped create the crisis. It is important to leave room for a robust private-sector secondary mortgage market that serves the taxpayer and homeowners equally well.

Realistically, these enormous entities won’t be allowed to simply disappear. Focusing on the function of the GSEs as mortgage credit guarantors, Congress could replace Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac with one or two private-sector entities that would purchase and securitize mortgages with a credit guarantee explicitly backed by the federal government. These entities would be privately owned but set up like public utilities and governed by a rate-setting commission that would establish a targeted rate of return. This approach would address the inherent conflicts between private ownership and public purpose that are unresolved in the current GSE structure.

The stress in this case would come from mortgage originators’ looking for new ways to put risky loans into the pool to get a government-backed guarantee. In this model, safety and soundness regulation would be essential, as would be supervisory oversight to make sure that the quality of conforming loans remained high.

An obvious issue is whether such a utility approach leaves room for the private sector in the secondary mortgage market. The size of the loans subject to the government-backed guarantee, as well as the price charged for the guarantee, would determine the extent of the private sector’s role. This should frame the debate and force policy makers to determine the government’s proper role in stimulating and subsidizing housing.

There is much other work to be done. Not only must we update our woefully inadequate regulatory architecture to better deal with large, interconnected financial institutions, we must also strengthen oversight of complex financial products, reform credit rating agencies, maintain fair-value accounting, change the way money market funds are structured and sold, and reinvigorate the securitization process. Underlying all of these actions is the need for greater transparency. Complexity is the enemy of transparency—whether in financial products, organizational structures, or business models. We need regulation and capital requirements that lead to greater simplicity, standardization, and consistency.

Contrary to popular belief, credit default swaps and other derivatives provide a useful function in making the capital markets more efficient and were not the cause of the crisis. But these financial instruments do introduce embedded and hidden leverage into financial institutions’ balance sheets, complicating due diligence for counterparties and making effective supervision more difficult. The resulting opacity, which should be unacceptable even in normal markets, only intensified and magnified the crisis. This system needs to be reformed so that these innovative instruments can play their important role as mitigators, not transmitters, of risk.

Standardized credit default swaps, which make up the vast majority of CDS contracts, should be traded on a public exchange, and nonstandardized contracts should be centrally cleared, subject to more regulatory scrutiny and greater capital charges. The key to this solution is for regulators to encourage standardization, require transparency, and penalize excessive complexity with capital charges. There will still be a role for customized derivative contracts, but only accompanied by appropriate supervision and increased costs.

One of the most glaring problems to emerge from the crisis was the poor quality of the rating of debt securities provided by the three major credit rating agencies: Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s, and Fitch. All have been granted special status as Nationally Recognized Statistical Ratings Organizations (NRSROs) by the SEC.

When I came to Washington in July 2006, only nine private-sector companies in the world carried a triple-A rating. Berkshire Hathaway and AIG were the only financial institutions so rated; GE, a major industrial company with what is essentially a large embedded financial institution, also had the top rating. Today there are only five triple-A-rated companies; AIG, Berkshire Hathaway, and GE have all been downgraded (as was Toyota). Yet as recently as January 2008, there were 64,000 structured financial instruments still rated triple-A, and many others had investment-grade ratings. As the credit crisis intensified, more than 221,000 rated tranches of asset-backed securities were downgraded in 2008 alone.

The agencies are enhancing the transparency, rigor, and independence of their ratings of structured products. But in the future, financial institutions and investors need to do more of their own homework, and regulators should no longer blindly use a high credit rating as a criterion for low capital requirements.

To reduce investor and regulator laxness resulting from overreliance on a few monopoly researchers, I would like to see a further review of how to increase competition among rating agencies. In addition, banking and securities laws and regulations should be amended to remove any reference to credit ratings as criteria to be relied on by regulators or investors to assess risk and capital charges.

Some people have also blamed the use of fair-value accounting for causing or accelerating the crisis. To the contrary, I am convinced that had we not had fair-value—or as it is sometimes known, mark-to-market—accounting, the excesses in our system would have been greater and the crisis would have been even more severe. Managements, investors, and regulators would have had even less understanding of the risks embedded in an institution’s balance sheet.

We need to maintain fair-value accounting, simplify the current implementation rules, and ensure consistency of application both globally and among similar institutions. The U.S. and international accounting standards setters must be allowed to get on with this important task without being pressured to make short-term, piecemeal changes that mask honest reporting by financial institutions.

It is critical to have an accounting system that shines a light on any securities with impaired value for which there is not an active market. These difficult-to-value assets need to be identified and their valuation methodology described in a clear and open manner.

There are more than 1,100 money market mutual funds in the U.S., with $3.8 trillion in assets and an estimated 30 million–plus individual customers. This is a concentrated yet fragmented industry with the top 40 funds managing about 30 percent of the assets. These funds invest for the most part in commercial paper instruments with a top credit rating or in government or quasi-government securities. Before the crisis, investors had come to believe that they would always have liquidity and would be able to get 100 percent of their principal back, because funds would always maintain a net asset value (NAV) of at least $1.00.

In the immediate aftermath of the Lehman failure, money market mutual funds came under intense pressure. A number were on the verge of “breaking the buck.” This dramatically eroded investor confidence, causing redemption requests to soar. In turn, the money funds pulled back on their funding of the many large financial institutions that depended on them for a big portion of their liquidity needs. It was a development that we were not well equipped to address.

We stepped in to guarantee the money market funds to prevent the crisis from getting worse, but the fundamental problems in the industry’s business model remain. Many of these funds charge investors very low fees, often as little as 5 basis points—or 0.05 percent—while offering interest rates that are higher than those available on insured bank deposits or on Treasury bills. If something looks too good to be true, it almost always is. In this case, it was the money fund industry’s soft or implicit guarantee of immediate liquidity and full return of principal with a premium yield and a low fee. Many, if not most, of these funds simply did not have the financial capacity to maintain their liquidity or a 100 percent preservation of capital for their investors in the midst of the credit crisis.

This expectation of complete liquidity with no fear of loss is a problem that should be addressed. Money funds are investment products, not guaranteed accounts. For years, the SEC has tried, unsuccessfully, to address this misperception. The SEC should explore whether fund managers should move from a fixed NAV, which makes money market funds resemble insured bank accounts, to a floating NAV. The funds would still be great products and could offer attractive returns, liquidity, and very low volatility and principal risk. But, as clients saw slight variations in principal, they would have a tangible indication that they were not investing in a bank account.

The credit crisis also exposed the erosion in mortgage underwriting standards, particularly in the originate-to-distribute securitization chain. To strengthen the underwriting practices and better align the interests of all parties, sponsors of these securities should be required to keep a continuing direct economic stake in the mortgages so that they have some “skin in the game,” with exposure to any future credit losses.

As I finish this book, the G-20 has just completed another summit, in Pittsburgh, and has successfully pivoted from crisis management to macroeconomic coordination. Building on the principles and action plan for reform we established in Washington at the first G-20 summit, in November 2008, and on the results of the meeting in London in April 2009, the G-20 will now serve as the major forum at which leaders of developed and emerging markets address global financial and economic issues.

Although the preeminence of the G-20 leaders’ forum rightly gives the emerging-markets countries a greater voice, it is also clear that the strength of the relationship between the U.S. and China will be critical to the functioning of the G-20 and global cooperation. Global problems cannot be solved by the U.S. and China alone, of course, but agreement with China makes it much easier to make real progress on any major issue.

The G-20’s role in tasking and reviewing the work of the international financial bodies will be among its enduring contributions. The creation and expanded role of the Financial Stability Board (FSB), which comprises central bankers, finance ministers, and securities regulators, has been an important outgrowth of the G-20 process. The FSB will have the lead role in establishing the rules of the road for capital, liquidity, and financial products that will need to be implemented by national legislatures. And on politically sensitive matters such as compensation, the FSB has already shown an ability to develop nuanced and constructive proposals. Together with other international standards setters such as the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO), the Basel Committee, and the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB), the FSB must play a crucial role in ensuring that the G-20 reform agenda is implemented in a coordinated and cooperative way that leads to convergence rather than fragmentation. None of this takes away from the preeminent role of the U.S. in the world economy, but simply recognizes the vital fact of our interdependence.

While much progress has been made, real risks remain, including those of trade and financial protectionism. At each G-20 summit, the leaders condemn protectionism, but they do so against the backdrop of increasing political pressures at home that have resulted in a variety of measures that are inconsistent with their repeated pledges. The U.S.’s own commitment to trade liberalization remains in question. As I complete this book, no action has been taken on pending free-trade agreements, and no progress has been made on completing the World Trade Organization’s Doha round of multilateral trade talks.

In a world where virtually everyone agrees we have had inadequate regulation of banks and capital markets, there is a very real danger that financial regulation will become a wolf in sheep’s clothing, rivaling tariffs as the protectionist measure of choice for those nations that want to limit or eliminate competition not only in financial services but also in any other sector of their economy. Though this is not a new development, the risks are greater today because the U.S. model of capitalism appears more vulnerable than in the past, even as the economic crisis pushes nations toward short-term measures to protect jobs. One of the lessons of the Great Depression is that protectionist actions by industrial nations seeking to wall off their countries to protect their jobs and industries were self-defeating and made that awful downturn longer and more painful.

The European Union has already introduced regulation that mandates that certain securities can count toward regulatory capital only if their credit ratings are issued by an agency located in the EU. The EU proposal on alternative investment funds similarly would require fund managers to have established offices in the EU or operate under “equivalent” regulations; otherwise they would not be allowed access to the EU market. And the EU is requiring that credit default swaps be cleared through clearing parties located in its member states. As a result, a number of other countries have indicated that they are considering similar territorial restrictions.

The potential fragmentation is not limited to Europe. The U.S. has prohibited banks receiving certain federal funds from issuing H-1B visas to hire highly skilled foreign nationals, even though such people would add value to the economy. The February 2009 U.S. stimulus bill contained a “Buy American” provision that has led to similar protectionist language in other bills. Both federal and state officials are seeking to insert protectionist restrictions even where they are not required by law.

The best way to combat protectionism, whether by tariff or regulation, is with strong leadership from the U.S. We must keep our markets open for trade and investment, enact previously negotiated trade pacts, work toward a successful Doha round, and forge new trade agreements and investment treaties. We must also demonstrate our commitment to rebuilding our economy, fixing our regulatory system, and getting the government out of the private sector as soon as possible. The world needs to know that we are serious about reducing our budget deficit and cleaning up our other messes.

I am quite hopeful that we will put in place the necessary reforms for the financial system. There is finally a broad consensus among policy makers in the U.S. and internationally as to the causes of the crisis. I also remain optimistic about the economic future of the U.S. and its continued leadership role in the global economy. I don’t mean to minimize our troubles, but every other major country has more-significant problems. As the richest country on earth, with the biggest, most diverse, and most resilient economy, we have the capacity to meet our challenges. Though what happened over the past few years was a difficult chapter in our nation’s economic history, it is just one chapter, and there will be many more that are marked by economic gains and rising prosperity if we learn from our mistakes and make the necessary corrections.

If we don’t lose our sense of urgency, and if the needed reforms are put in place domestically and internationally, markets will adapt and continue their positive trend of the past 25 years. Let’s not forget that these markets helped tear down the Iron Curtain, lifted hundreds of millions of people out of poverty, and brought great prosperity to our nation. Efficient, well-regulated capital markets can continue to provide economic progress around the world. That inevitably leads to more political freedom and greater individual liberty.