US Treasury Calls for Section 1071 to Be Repealed

| By:


In a 149-page report prepared for President Trump, the US Treasury has called for the repeal of Section 1071 of Dodd-Frank. Section 1071 is the governing law behind the CFPB’s jump into small business lending data collection. Citing the cost of data collection and anemic small business loan growth since 2008, the Treasury says, “Although financial institutions are not currently required to gather such information [required by the law], many lenders have expressed concern that this requirement will be costly to implement, will directly contribute to higher small business borrowing costs, and reduce access to small business loans.”

Charts from the report

Change in Small Business Lending

“THE PROVISIONS IN THIS SECTION OF DODD-FRANK PERTAINING TO SMALL BUSINESSES SHOULD BE REPEALED TO ENSURE THAT THE INTENDED BENEFITS DO NOT INADVERTENTLY REDUCE THE ABILITY OF SMALL BUSINESSES TO ACCESS CREDIT AT A REASONABLE COST” – US Treasury

Growth in Bank Lending

Bank Loan Growth

The current deadline to reply to the CFPB’s Request For Information is July 14th though industry sources expect the deadline will be pushed back. Of course, if Section 1071 were successfully repealed, the RFI would be moot.

The Choice Act, a bill that just passed the House of Representatives, does indeed repeal Section 1071, but industry sources following the legislation believe the bill will die in the Senate.

Even if a repeal never happens, it is possible that regulations pursuant to Section 1071 may not even go into effect until the early 2020s if similar rulemaking trajectories are to be used as a guide. With payday lending, for example, the CFPB RFI on the matter ended in early 2012 but to-date there still has been no final rule.

You can download the full Treasury Report here.

Last modified: January 12, 2020
Sean Murray


Related:

Category: Regulation

Home Regulation › US Treasury Calls for Section 1071 to Be Repealed