Financial Reform Watch

Exploring Under the TARP

There is a new team in town, and in one of his first public acts as Treasury Secretary, Tim Geithner established a policy aimed at increasing the transparency and accountability of the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). Treasury will now post all TARP contracts on the Internet. New contracts will go on Treasury’s website within five to ten business days, and the department will post existing agreements on a rolling basis. At the time of the Secretary’s announcement, Treasury had already posted the agreements of the major nine institutions that first partook in the Capital Purchase Program; the Citigroup contract under the Targeted Investment Program; the AIG deal under the Systemically Significant Failing Institutions Program; and the GM, GMAC, and Chrysler contracts under the Automotive Industry Financing Program. At the request of individual institutions, the department will redact confidential and proprietary information.

The Secretary also met today with the individuals tasked with TARP oversight – the head of the General Accounting Office, the TARP Special Inspector General at Treasury, and the TARP Congressional Oversight Panel. Geithner promised to unveil more reforms in the coming weeks.

U.S. Department of Treasury, EESA Contracts

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