Summers: Obama doesn't want to sell cars

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Gerald Herbert/AP
Obama economics adviser Lawrence Summers (pictured here at the White House last month) laid out the administration's plans to regulate business in a speech Friday.

President Obama wants you to know that he aims to change the world, not run US businesses.

"I have no interest in managing the banking system – or, for that matter, running auto companies or other private institutions," he said Tuesday.

So why exactly do US taxpayers own a rather large insurance company, two giant mortgage-backing corporations, significant shares of America's leading banks, 8 percent of Chrysler, and soon a controlling interest in General Motors?

Reasons for the spree

On Friday, Lawrence Summers, director of the White House National Economic Council, laid out the rationale for the government's buying spree – and where the administration hopes to go from here:

"We only act when necessary to avert unacceptable – and in some cases dire – outcomes," he told the Council on Foreign Relations. "The actions we take are those of necessity, not choice."

Furthermore, these moves are temporary, he said. "Our objective is not to supplant or replace markets. Rather, the objective is to save them from their own excesses and improve our market-based system going forward."

Fear of rules

To critics, of course, giving the White House the chance to "improve our market-based system" is like crashing a wedding with a wrecking ball. The regulatory burden they fear is, to the administration, the necessary rulemaking for a system that's not proven to be self-correcting.

"Our financial system is not fail-safe until it is safe for failure," Mr. Summers said.

Among the regulatory changes that the administration intends to push for: monitoring the entire financial system, getting the authority to intervene when the stumbles of any financial institution threaten the system, ensuring that firms have adequate capital, eliminating regulatory overlap, and improving consumer protections. (Hat tip to Wall Street Journal blogger Damian Paletta for laying them out succinctly.)

All this will be complex – not unlike, say, running an insurer, two car companies, and a couple of mortgage-backers.

Getting the regulations right will be tough enough. Navigating the politics and the pressures from bureaucrats and industry lobbyists is proving harder.

Maybe changing the world is easier.

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