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A government
working, as
President
Abraham Lincoln
said, “by the
people, for the
people,” is part
of what has
always made our
nation unique.
As such,
Americans want
and deserve to
know how their
taxes are
spent. Whether
Congress spends
one dollar or $1
trillion of
taxpayer money,
Americans expect
transparency and
openness in
government.
Right now, with
the Federal
government
spending at
unprecedented
levels in an
attempt to
address economic
concerns, the
need for greater
transparency and
oversight is
paramount,
especially when
the financial
security of our
nation is at
stake.
Late last year,
the U.S. entered
into a financial
crisis unlike
anything we have
seen since the
Great Depression.
If
Congress had
failed to act,
economists
predicted credit
markets would
have seized and
economic
activity would
have ground to a
halt, putting
our nation into
further peril.
Right now, with
the Federal
government
spending at
unprecedented
levels in an
attempt to
address economic
concerns, the
need for greater
transparency and
oversight is
paramount,
especially when
the financial
security of our
nation is at
stake.
In response,
Congress
authorized $700
billion for the
Troubled Asset
Relief Program,
or TARP.
Congress
intended this
authority to be
used to purchase
toxic assets and
mortgage-backed
securities.
Although a
catastrophic
meltdown of our
nation's
financial
markets was
averted, the
haste in which
the program was
created left
voids in
oversight and
minimal control
over how the
funds are spent.
After the
program was
created, TARP
was expanded by
the Department
of the Treasury
to include 12
separate
programs
involving
government and
private funds of
up to almost $3
trillion –
roughly the
equivalent of
last year’s
entire Federal
budget. From
large capital
infusions into
hundreds of
financial
institutions, to
a program
designed to
modify millions
of mortgages, to
public-private
partnerships
purchasing toxic
assets from
banks using
tremendous
leverage
provided by
government loans
or guarantees,
TARP has evolved
into a program
of unprecedented
scope, scale,
and complexity.
As a result, the
Federal
government has
struggled to
keep track of
how Treasury
funds have been
spent.
Currently, the
Treasury
Department lacks
a data-driven,
transparent
process for
reporting when
funds are
infused into
TARP entities
and whether they
have been used
and performed as
intended. There
are reports
being filed, but
in many cases
they contain
redundancies and
inconsistencies.
Some have argued
that analysis
can be performed
with the reports
already being
provided to
Congress;
however, almost
all analyses
performed to
date have been
collected
through survey
responses and
audits. Surveys
are
self-reported
responses to
fixed
information in
fixed periods of
time.
Unfortunately,
they occur after
the funds have
been spent;
making it
difficult to
ensure proper
accountability.
The TARP’s
special
inspector
general recently
released a
report based on
surveys
collected from
more than 300
TARP recipients.
The report
contained
specific
information
about how TARP
recipients are
using the
federal aid. Of
the banks
surveyed for the
report, 110 have
used the funds
for investment,
52 used it for
debt repayment,
and 15 used it
to purchase
other banks.
While this
report is a good
first step
toward greater
transparency, it
is only a
snapshot of an
issue that
requires
constant
monitoring and
analysis.
In an effort to
provide greater
oversight of the
use of TARP
funds, I have
joined with Senators
Mark Warner
(D-VA), Sherrod
Brown (D-OH),
and Sam
Brownback (R-KS)
to bring better
transparency to
the program.
Our effort,
introduced as
the TARP
Transparency
Act, has earned
the support of
fiscal advocacy
groups such as
Citizens Against
Government
Waste, Americans
for Tax Reform,
and the Center
for Fiscal
Responsibility.
If approved by
Congress, the law would
direct the
Treasury
Department to
collect all TARP
data in a
readily usable
fashion to make
it transparent
and traceable.
Detailed
information on
TARP
expenditures and
the actions of
TARP fund
recipients would
be made
available
through a single
database in a
standardized
format. The
information
would be
collected and
disseminated in
near real-time
to help present
a clear picture
of how and where
the money is
being used.
Every American
has a right to
know how the
more than $700
billion
authorized
through TARP has
been used.
Large, complex
government
programs such as
TARP can often
be the source of
misspent
taxpayer
dollars. Every
American has a
right to know
how the more
than $700
billion
authorized
through TARP has
been used.
Congress cannot
be a good
steward of the
public trust if
it has limited
access to
essential
details of the
TARP.
Transparency in
government is
healthy for our
democracy.
Americans expect
it, and Congress
has an
obligation to
provide
it.
RF
Mel Martinez is
a U.S. Senator
for Florida, a
member of the
Senate Banking
Committee and
former Secretary
of the U.S.
Department of
Housing and
Urban
Development. |