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Business News/ News / World/  Barack Obama says The Big Short was wrong; Wall Street has changed
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Barack Obama says The Big Short was wrong; Wall Street has changed

Obama, who sees a major shift in how Wall Street is regulated, bemoaned his fractious relationship with Wall Street

Barack Obama said it is true that the financial system has not been dismantled, and in that sense, Bernie Sanders’s critique is correct. Photo: BloombergPremium
Barack Obama said it is true that the financial system has not been dismantled, and in that sense, Bernie Sanders’s critique is correct. Photo: Bloomberg

Washington: Looking back on his economic legacy, President Barack Obama disputes the conclusion in The Big Short movie that nothing changed on Wall Street after the 2008 economic meltdown and maintains that his policies have helped stabilize the financial sector.

In a wide-ranging interview with the New York Times published Thursday, Obama bemoaned his fractious relationship with Wall Street, said finance is absorbing more talent in science and engineering than it should, and speculated he might have gone into business if not politics. But he has little patience for criticism from business leaders.

“One of the constants that I’ve had to deal with over the last few years is folks on Wall Street complaining even as the stock market went from in the 6,000s to 16,000 or 17,000," he said. “They’d be constantly complaining about our economic policies. That’s not rooted in anything they’re experiencing; it has to do with ideology and their aggravations about higher taxes."

In his Dodd-Frank legislation to overhaul the financial system, Obama sees a major shift in how Wall Street is regulated. He takes issue with Hollywood’s version of The Big Short, which suggests that little has changed on Wall Street.

Obama on Sanders

“There is no doubt that the financial system is substantially more stable," he said. “It is true that we have not dismantled the financial system, and in that sense, Bernie Sanders’s critique is correct."

Obama’s statement put further distance between himself and the Vermont senator whose bid to replace him has garnered massive rallies and featured repeated calls to break up America’s biggest banks. Obama said such a drastic change in the financial system could have unintended consequences.

“But one of the things that I’ve consistently tried to remind myself during the course of my presidency is that the economy is not an abstraction," Obama said. “It’s not something that you can just redesign and break up and put back together again without consequences."

Obama saved his harshest criticism for Republicans running in the 2016 race, calling their economic plans “fantasy."

“If you look at the platforms, the economic platforms of the current Republican candidates for president, they don’t simply defy logic and any known economic theories, they are fantasy," Obama said.

“Slashing taxes particularly for those at the very top, dismantling regulatory regimes that protect our air and our environment and then projecting that this is going to lead to 5% or 7% growth, and claiming that they’ll do all this while balancing the budget," he said.

“Nobody would even, with the most rudimentary knowledge of economics, think that any of those things are plausible." Bloomberg

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Published: 28 Apr 2016, 07:51 PM IST
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