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President Obama: Good morning, everybody.
In a few moments I'll depart for Canada to take part in a summit
with the G8 and the G20 nations.
This is the third G20 summit we've held since I was sworn
in as President.
At our first meeting, in London, with the world in the grips of
the worst financial crisis of our time,
we acted boldly and swiftly to bring our economy back
from the brink.
At our second meeting, in Pittsburgh,
with our recovery beginning to take hold,
we agreed to work to pursue a balanced pattern of global
growth, and repair our financial systems.
This weekend in Toronto, I hope we can build on this progress
by coordinating our efforts to promote economic growth,
to pursue financial reform, and to strengthen
the global economy.
We need to act in concert for a simple reason: This crisis
proved, and events continue to affirm that our national
economies are inextricably linked.
And just as economic turmoil in one place can quickly spread to
another, safeguards in each of our nations can
help protect all nations.
I'm gratified we've made great progress towards enacting these
safeguards here at home.
Because of the incredibly hard work of Chairman Dodd and
Chairman Frank, and the strong leadership of Chairwoman Lincoln
and Chairman Peterson, and the great efforts of the conferees
and members of both parties -- who were up very late last
night -- we are poised to pass the toughest financial reform
since the ones we created in the aftermath of the
Great Depression.
Early this morning, the House and Senate reached an agreement
on a set of Wall Street reforms that represents 90 percent of
what I proposed when I took up this fight.
Now, let me be clear.
Our economic growth and prosperity depend on a strong,
robust financial sector, and I will continue to do what I can
to foster and support a dynamic private sector.
But we've all seen what happens when there's inadequate
oversight and insufficient transparency on Wall Street.
The reforms making their way through Congress will hold Wall
Street accountable so we can help prevent another financial
crisis like the one that we're still recovering from.
We'll put in place the toughest consumer financial protections
in our history, while creating an independent
agency to enforce them.
Through this agency, we'll combine under one roof the
consumer protection functions that currently are divided among
half a dozen different agencies.
Now there will be one agency whose sole job will be to look
out for you.
Credit card companies will no longer be able to mislead you
with pages and pages of fine print.
You will no longer be subject to all kinds of hidden fees
and penalties, or the predatory practices
of unscrupulous lenders.
Instead, we'll make sure that credit card companies and
mortgage companies play by the rules.
You'll be empowered with easy-to-understand forms
so you know what you're agreeing to.
And you'll have the clear and concise information
you need to make financial decisions that are best for
you and your family.
Wall Street reform will also strengthen our economy in a
number of other ways.
We'll make our financial system more transparent by bringing the
kinds of complex deals that help trigger this crisis,
like trades in a $600 trillion derivatives market,
into the light of day.
We'll enact the Volcker Rule to make sure that banks protected
by the safety net of the FDIC can't engage in risky trades
for their own profit.
And we'll create what's called a resolution authority to help
wind down firms whose collapse would threaten our entire
financial system.
No longer will be have companies that are "too big to fail".
Over the last 17 months, we passed an economic Recovery Act,
health insurance reform, education reform,
and we are now on the brink of passing Wall Street reform.
And at the G20 summit this weekend,
I'll work with other nations not only to coordinate our financial
reform efforts, but to promote global economic growth while
ensuring that each nation can pursue a path that is
sustainable for its own public finances.
As the main forum for international economic
cooperation, the G20 is the right place to
discuss such issues.
And over the last few days, I hope we can build on our past
progress and strengthen the global economy for a long
time to come.
Thank you very much, everybody.