STATEMENT OF ADMINISTRATION POLICY
House Amendment to the Senate Amendment to H.R. 34 - 21st Century Cures Act
(Rules Committee Print)
The
Administration strongly supports passage of the bipartisan House
Amendment to the Senate Amendment to H.R. 34, the 21st Century Cures
Act, which dedicates more than $6 billion to implement key priorities
such as the President's proposal to combat the heroin and prescription
opioid epidemic; the Vice President's Cancer Moonshot; and the
President's signature biomedical research initiatives, the Precision
Medicine and Brain Research through Advancing Innovative
Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) Initiatives. It also takes important steps to
improve mental health, including provisions that build on the work of
the President's Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Parity Task
Force, and includes policies to further modernize the drug approval
process.
The
legislation includes $1 billion over two years, including $500 million
in Fiscal Year 2017, to combat the prescription opioid and heroin
epidemic, consistent with the President's budget request. More
Americans now die every year from drug overdoses than they do in motor
vehicle crashes, and the majority involve opioids. The opioid epidemic
is devastating families and communities and straining the capacity of
law enforcement and the healthcare system. The resources included in
the bill will allow states to expand access to treatment to help
individuals seeking help to find it and to start the road to recovery,
with preference given to states with an incidence or prevalence of
opioid use disorders that is substantially higher relative to other
states.
The
Administration is committed to taking immediate action to lay the
groundwork to ensure that the funds in the bill would be disbursed
quickly and effectively so we can begin to address these important
public health challenges.
The
bill also includes $1.8 billion, including $1 billion over the next
three years, to support the Vice President's Cancer Moonshot. The
Moonshot aims to accelerate research efforts and make new therapies
available to more patients, while also improving our ability to prevent
cancer and detect it at an early stage. The resources in this
legislation will support investment in promising new therapies like
cancer immunotherapy, new prevention tools, cancer vaccine development,
novel early detection tools, and pediatric cancer interventions. As the
Vice President and scientific experts have said, we are at an
inflection point in cancer research and this investment could help seize
this opportunity.
The complete statement is available here.
H.R. 6392 - Systemic Risk Designation Improvement Act of 2016
(Rep. Luetkemeyer, R-MO)
The Administration strongly opposes H.R. 6392, the Systemic Risk Designation Improvement Act of 2016.
Actions taken in the years since enactment of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (the Dodd-Frank Act) are
curbing excessive risk-taking, closing regulatory gaps, and making our
financial system safer and more resilient, for both markets and
consumers. H.R. 6392 would severely weaken these reforms, put in
place to discourage dozens of the Nation's largest banks from engaging
in the risky behavior that precipitated the 2008 financial crisis. We
have made great progress as a result of the Dodd-Frank Act, and we
cannot afford to return to the days of deregulation and lax oversight.
The
financial crisis revealed grave weaknesses in the Nation's financial
regulatory framework. By passing and signing the landmark reforms of
the Dodd-Frank Act, the Congress and the President, respectively, took
significant steps to limit risks to financial stability and protect
taxpayers from the consequences of such risks. Because of the
Dodd-Frank Act, the financial regulators have better tools to deal with
financial shocks when they occur, and are able to protect Main Street
and taxpayers from Wall Street's recklessness. The law, among many
other risk controls, provides the prudential regulators, and in
particular the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, the ability to apply
enhanced prudential standards to bank holding companies with more than
$50 billion in total consolidated assets. In conjunction, the law
provides for a rigorous stress-testing regime, along with capital,
liquidity and living will requirements, to better ensure that financial
institutions are prepared for severe economic circumstances. Only a
financial system strong enough to withstand a major financial shock is
capable of promoting sustainable economic growth.
Bank
holding companies of all sizes were already subject to the Federal
Reserve's supervision prior to enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act. In
light of the greater risks posed by the Nation's largest banks as
exhibited in the financial crisis, the Congress directed the Federal
Reserve to simply apply stricter and escalating prudential standards to
these few institutions with more than $50 billion in total consolidated
assets. This crucial underpinning of Wall Street reform better
positions our regulators to shed light on emerging threats and reduce
the likelihood of another financial crisis.
H.R.
6392 would eliminate the $50 billion threshold, impairing the
application of enhanced prudential standards to trillions of dollars of
assets managed by dozens of the Nation's largest banks. Under H.R.
6392, only eight U.S. global systemically important banks would be
subject to enhanced prudential standards without further action by the
Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC). All other bank holding
companies – including more than 20 large regional banks, each with more
than $50 billion in assets and some that played a significant role in
the financial crisis and received taxpayer support – would have to go
through an extensive process and be individually designated by the FSOC
as a precondition for increased oversight. While an extensive
designation process is appropriate for nonbank financial companies that
would be newly regulated by the Federal Reserve, such a process is
inappropriate for bank holding companies already supervised by the
Federal Reserve. The new administrative burden imposed by H.R. 6392
would only distract the FSOC from focusing on its mission to proactively
identify and protect against risks in the financial system before they
wreak havoc on the Nation's economy. Requirements that impede the
ability of regulators to apply common-sense safeguards in a tiered and
tailored manner to large financial institutions only expose taxpayers to
the very risks that led to the financial crisis.
The
President has been clear about his opposition to any legislation that
would weaken or reduce oversight of the financial system. H.R. 6392
would hamper oversight of dozens of the largest banks in the country and
drastically roll back necessary provisions in the Dodd-Frank Act,
hamstringing regulators charged with monitoring and regulating the
largest financial institutions and reverting to deficient, pre-crisis
standards.
If the President were presented with H.R. 6392, his senior advisors would recommend he veto the bill.
Source: Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget
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