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178 lines
7.6 KiB
Markdown
Executable File
178 lines
7.6 KiB
Markdown
Executable File
# Consumer Financial Stability Act (CFSA)
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**118th Congress, 2nd Session**
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**H.R. _____ / S. _____**
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---
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**A BILL**
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To protect and strengthen consumer financial protections by preserving the independence and enforcement powers of key regulatory agencies, expanding deposit insurance protections, and preventing harmful deregulation of consumer financial safeguards.
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*Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,*
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## Section 1. Short Title
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This Act may be cited as the "Consumer Financial Stability Act" or "CFSA".
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## Section 2: Purpose and Definitions
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### 1.1 Purpose
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To protect and strengthen consumer financial protections by preserving the independence and enforcement powers of key regulatory agencies, expanding deposit insurance protections, and preventing harmful deregulation of consumer financial safeguards.
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### 1.2 Definitions
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- "Regulatory agencies" refers to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
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- "Predatory lending" includes but is not limited to deceptive loan terms, excessive fees, and exploitative interest rates
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- "Financial institution" includes banks, credit unions, lending institutions, and financial service providers
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## Section 2: Protection of Regulatory Agencies
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### 2.1 Agency Independence
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1. The CFPB and FDIC shall maintain complete operational and budgetary independence
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2. Executive branch officials may not:
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- Remove agency leadership without cause
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- Redirect agency funding
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- Modify agency enforcement priorities
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3. Both agencies must maintain separate physical and digital infrastructure from other executive departments
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### 2.2 Funding Protection
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1. CFPB funding shall be guaranteed at 12% of the Federal Reserve's operating expenses
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2. FDIC funding shall be maintained through bank assessments
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3. Congress may increase but not decrease these funding levels
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4. Agency budgets must be insulated from annual appropriations process
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## Section 3: Enhanced Consumer Protections
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### 3.1 Deposit Insurance
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1. FDIC insurance limits increased to $500,000 per depositor, per bank
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2. Additional temporary coverage up to $1 million for:
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- Home sale proceeds (90 days)
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- Insurance settlements (180 days)
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- Inheritance funds (90 days)
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3. Annual adjustment of limits based on inflation
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4. Creation of an Emergency Deposit Protection Fund for systemic banking crises
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### 3.2 Lending Protections
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1. Maximum interest rate cap of 36% APR on all consumer loans
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2. Prohibition of forced arbitration clauses in financial contracts
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3. Mandatory clear disclosure of all fees and terms in plain language
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4. Ban on discriminatory lending practices based on AI/algorithmic decisions
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5. Required consideration of alternative data for credit decisions
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## Section 4: Enforcement Powers
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### 4.1 CFPB Authority
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1. Power to examine and supervise all consumer financial institutions
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2. Authority to issue civil monetary penalties up to $25 million per violation
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3. Ability to ban individuals from working in financial services for serious violations
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4. Emergency powers to freeze assets in cases of suspected massive fraud
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### 4.2 Investigation and Prosecution
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1. Dedicated financial crimes unit within CFPB
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2. Mandatory criminal referrals for serious violations
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3. Protected channels for consumer complaints and whistleblowers
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4. Public database of enforcement actions and violations
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## Section 5: Deregulation Prevention
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### 5.1 Congressional Oversight
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1. Two-thirds majority required in both houses to:
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- Modify core consumer protection regulations
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- Reduce agency enforcement powers
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- Alter agency independence structure
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2. Mandatory 60-day public comment period for any proposed changes
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3. Required impact studies before any significant regulatory changes
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### 5.2 Review and Reporting
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1. Annual public reports on:
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- Consumer protection enforcement actions
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- Financial institution compliance rates
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- Emerging consumer financial threats
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2. Quarterly congressional oversight hearings
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3. Independent audits of agency effectiveness
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## Section 6: Digital Financial Protection
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### 6.1 Cryptocurrency and Digital Assets
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1. Mandatory consumer protections for digital asset transactions
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2. Registration requirements for crypto exchanges and platforms
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3. Required disclosure of digital asset risks
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4. Prohibition of deceptive digital asset marketing
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### 6.2 Online Banking Security
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1. Minimum cybersecurity standards for financial institutions
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2. Mandatory data breach notifications within 48 hours
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3. Consumer reimbursement for unauthorized digital transactions
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4. Regular security audits and penetration testing
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## Section 7: Implementation and Enforcement
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### 7.1 Timeline
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1. Immediate effect for agency independence provisions
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2. 90-day implementation period for new consumer protections
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3. 180-day compliance deadline for financial institutions
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4. Annual review and updates of implementation progress
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### 7.2 Enforcement Mechanism
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1. Joint CFPB-FDIC enforcement coordination
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2. State attorneys general empowered to enforce federal standards
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3. Private right of action for consumers
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4. Whistleblower rewards program
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## Section 8: Severability
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If any provision of this Act is held invalid, the remainder shall not be affected and shall continue in full force and effect.
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## Section 9: Digital Financial Services
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### 9.1 Fintech Regulation
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1. **Comprehensive Oversight**
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- Banking-level oversight for fintech companies processing >$10B annual transaction volume
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- Mandatory deposit insurance for digital banking services
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- Real-time transaction monitoring requirements
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- Consumer protection standards equivalent to traditional banks
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2. **Digital Payment Protection**
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- Instant fraud detection and reimbursement systems
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- Enhanced authentication requirements for high-value transactions
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- Consumer liability limits for unauthorized digital transactions
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- Mandatory security breach notifications within 24 hours
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### 9.2 Cryptocurrency Consumer Protections
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1. **Enhanced Disclosure Requirements**
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- Clear risk warnings for all cryptocurrency products
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- Real-time price volatility disclosure
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- Mandatory cool-off periods for large cryptocurrency purchases
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- Plain-language explanations of cryptocurrency risks
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2. **Consumer Safeguards**
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- Segregated customer asset requirements for crypto exchanges
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- Insurance requirements for customer crypto holdings
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- Mandatory audit trails for all crypto transactions
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- Consumer right to cryptocurrency transaction reversal in cases of fraud
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### 9.3 AI Lending Protections
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1. **Algorithmic Transparency**
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- Mandatory algorithmic bias testing for all lending decisions
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- Public disclosure of AI lending model factors and weights
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- Right to human review of AI-driven loan denials
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- Transparent credit scoring algorithms with explainable decisions
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2. **Anti-Discrimination Measures**
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- Prohibited use of discriminatory variables in AI lending models
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- Regular testing for disparate impact on protected classes
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- Corrective action requirements for biased lending algorithms
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- Penalties for willful use of discriminatory AI systems
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### 9.4 Digital Asset Custody
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1. **Custodial Standards**
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- Fiduciary duty requirements for digital asset custodians
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- Segregation of customer assets from custodian assets
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- Insurance requirements for custodial services
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- Regular third-party audits of custodial practices
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2. **Consumer Rights**
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- Right to direct custody of digital assets
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- Clear disclosure of custodial risks and fees
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- Guaranteed access to assets during custodian operational issues
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- Protection against unauthorized asset transfers |