"When large, interconnected financial institutions become distressed, policymakers have
historically faced a choice between (1) a taxpayer-funded bailout, and (2) the destabilization of
the financial system—a dilemma that commentators have labeled the “too-big-to-fail” (TBTF)
problem. The 2007-2009 financial crisis highlighted the significance of the TBTF problem.
During the crisis, a number of large financial institutions experienced severe distress, and the
federal government committed hundreds of billions of dollars in an effort to rescue the financial
system. According to some commentators, the crisis underscored the inadequacy of existing
prudential regulation of large financial institutions, and of the bankruptcy system for resolving the
failure of such institutions.
In response to the crisis, Congress passed and President Obama signed the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank) in 2010. Titles I and II of Dodd-Frank
are specifically directed at minimizing the systemic risk created by TBTF financial institutions. In
order to minimize the risks that large financial institutions will fail, Title I of Dodd-Frank
establishes an enhanced prudential regulatory regime for certain large bank holding companies
and non-bank financial companies. In order to “resolve” (i.e., reorganize or liquidate)
systemically important financial institutions, Title II establishes a new resolution regime available
for such institutions outside of the Bankruptcy Code.."
Regulotory reform
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