Author Archives: Brian Wolfman

Are the New Mortgage Foreclosure Settlements a Bad Deal for Consumers?

By now, you have probably heard of the two new mortgage foreclosure settlements with federal regulators, one in which 10 banks have settled for $8.5 billion. (In the other settlement, mega-lender Bank of America will pay Fannie Mae almost $10.4 billion. mostly to buy back bad mortgages it had earlier sold to Fannie.) $3.3 billion […]

Compared to 2012, the Just-Enacted Tax Bill Hikes Taxes for Nearly Every U.S. Worker

by Brian Wolfman The President campaigned emphatically on a tax plan that would raise taxes for people making more than $250,000. He was equally emphatic that he would not abide a tax bill that would raise taxes on middle-income working families. He said this many times. Democrats made the same point: We can't let the […]

Is U.S. Government Debt Different?

That's the name of this brand-new 344-page ebook on public debt in the United States edited by Franklin Allen, Anna Gelpern, Charles Mooney, and David Skeel. The book contains 15 articles on the public debt, including one called "Origins of the Fiscal Constitution" by Michael McConnell, a couple articles on the U.S. government's capacity to […]

FDA Proposes Food Safety Rules to Implement 2011 Food Safety Modernization Act, With More Rules to Come

by Brian Wolfman The FDA has issued two proposed rules to implement the Food Saftey Modernization Act enacted in 2011. Check out the FDA's home page for the new rules. The law seeks to do more to prevent food borne illness. The first new rule concerns controls for human food and is aimed at the […]

Military consumers get a federal private right of action

by Maura Dundon, Senior Policy Counsel, Center for Responsible Lending Military consumers get a federal private right of action Recent amendments to the Military Lending Act (aka the Talent Amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act) provide a rare, new private right of action for military consumers—but the effectiveness of the potentially broad-sweeping Act still […]

David Lazarus on Sending Corporate Criminals to Jail

The LA Times's David Lazurus says in this article that the large-sounding corporate criminal penalties — like recent ones against Glaxo for off-label drug promotion and against BP for conduct that led to the Gulf oil spill — aren't enough to deter and that some corporate criminals should spend time behind bars. Here's an excerpt: If […]

Rochelle Broboff on the Supreme Court’s Nitro-Lift Decision and the Concern Over Supreme Court Unanimity in FAA Decisions

We posted in late November about the Supreme Court's unanimous per curiam Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) decision in Nitro-Lift Technologies v. Howard. There, the Justices held that, in light of an arbitration clause, only an arbitrator and not the Oklahoma courts could, in the first instance, hold contract provisions unenforceable. Now, in this article, Rochelle Broboff […]