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Morning Reading

Good morning. A few things to start the day — Goldman gets sued, the Pentagon expresses concern about consumer protection and a list of new economy slang:

Pension fund sues Goldman Sachs over compensation (CBS)

The International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers pension fund said the bank allocates about 47 percent of its 2009 revenue toward compensation, according to the Reuters news agency. The lawsuit aims to recoup some of the compensation for Goldman shareholders, saying the payments “vastly overcompensate management and constitute corporate waste.”

The Oscars, the NFL and failed public policy (Real Clear Markets)

In both cases, however, the consumer sits in the middle of this game as the two sides hurtle towards each other. I suspect that many people would like to sidestep the whole mess and say, “A plague on both your houses.” Yet it is public policy to a certain extent that leaves the TV viewer stuck where he is because over time government has granted the major players in these battles certain rights and exemptions to laws that have given them leverage over the rest of us.

Game consoles are zapping US energy (Marketplace Morning Report)

Noah Horowitz is with the Natural Resources Defense Council. He says the most popular models are energy vampires.

NOAH HOROWITZ: If you leave your Xbox 360 or Playstation 3 on all night long when you’re done, you’re using as much energy each year as two new refrigerators would.

Pentagon weighs in on consumer protection (PBS NewsHour)

This is hardly the first time the military has concerned itself with consumer protections.

Since 1994, the military has required personnel to receive financial literacy training. At first, it seemed that required education had little effect: A 2005 report by consumer advocacy group Center for Responsible Lending found that 1in 5 active-duty military personnel had been payday borrowers in the past year and that “predatory payday lending costs military families over $80 million in abusive fees every year.”

Recession slang: Ten new terms for the new economy (Christian Science Monitor)

  1. Decruited, adj. To be fired from a position one has not even started yet.

Sample sentence: “At first I felt really bad about being decruited from that corporate law firm after spending two summers of law school interning for them. But then I decided to make the most of my funemployment and use my signing bonus to travel around Europe.”

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Comments (4)

JPM | Respond
March 10, 2010 7:15 AM PT

I keep wondering how the new customer protection agency rate Madoff before his downfall. Would the new agency be based off the ratings from the SEC?

It appears to me that regulators only calm the public down and make them feel safe while the ground under the public erodes away. I think I would like to know that I live in a dangerous world rather than having people tell me that everythng is ok until one day it’s not.

Scott Jagow: responding to JPM | Respond
March 10, 2010 7:45 AM PT

JPM, I think that’s a fair point and an insightful one. I have little doubt that part of the drive for a consumer protection agency is psychological rather than being based on the realistic potential of such an agency. Still, if they’re going to create a CFPA, it really should be independent instead of being housed within an entity like the Fed. The conflict of interests — real and perceived — are too great.

ChacoKevy: responding to JPM | Respond
March 10, 2010 8:55 AM PT

Your larger point is understood, but the CFPA wouldn’t say anything about Madoff. The CFPA would be targeting more traditional mortgage and lending products: loans (prime, sub-prime, auto and pay-day), credit cards etc.

Every indication is that it would regulate institutional lending practices, not investment management. The Madoffs, for better or worse, is still SEC territory.

JPM: responding to ChacoKevy | Respond
March 17, 2010 5:15 AM PT

I tried to post sections of the passed House bill. I think it could include Madoff type investments. The language is pretty general.

HDS was created to protect us from terrorists, but as time went by they absorbed other responsibilities. So, we really don’t know what responsibilities are laid out until the agency is created.

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