
The Treasury Department Sends a Clear Signal
U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Basent recently emphasized that the government will continue to promote adjustments in the financial regulatory environment to serve broader economic growth goals. Against the backdrop of inflationary pressures not yet fully receding and public affordability concerns, the Treasury Department is attempting to infuse more vitality into the economy through changes in policy orientation.
In a written statement attached to the Financial Stability Oversight Council's annual report, Basent pointed out that economic growth itself is an important pillar of financial stability. This statement is seen as a critical signal from the Trump administration to further emphasize "growth priority" in the realm of financial policy.
Deregulation Becomes the Main Policy Line
In recent years, the U.S. government has started to adjust several financial regulatory rules. These include revisiting bank capital adequacy requirements and relaxing post-crisis restrictions on certain financing and credit activities. Supporters believe that excessive capital constraints undermine the ability of financial institutions to act as intermediaries in key markets, especially in providing liquidity in the U.S. Treasury market.
Policy makers view moderate deregulation not as a weakening of risk controls, but as a correction of long-term institutional constraints, allowing the financial system to serve the real economy more effectively. This logic is gradually becoming a consensus between the Treasury Department and some regulatory agencies.
Regulatory Controversy Continues to Rise
Despite official emphasis on the necessity of policy adjustments, doubts from the market and academia persist. Some consumer protection organizations and risk researchers warn that relaxing regulations may stimulate asset expansion in the short term, but it also plants the seeds of systemic risk.
Some argue that overly relying on rule relaxation to drive growth could exacerbate financial cycle fluctuations and even weaken crisis prevention capabilities. This divergence highlights the difficult balance the U.S. faces between growth targets and long-term stability.
"Cumulative Effect" as a Reason for Reform
When explaining the logic of regulatory reform, Basent specifically emphasized the "cumulative effect of rules." He noted that traditional cost-benefit assessments often look at individual regulations in isolation, overlooking the impact of long-term aggregated regulatory measures on market efficiency and economic vitality.
Under this approach, the Treasury Department hopes to identify which regulatory arrangements constitute an unnecessary burden in the current environment through systematic evaluation and optimize accordingly. This statement indicates that future regulatory reforms may focus more on overall coordination rather than singular fixes.
Change in the Role of the Financial Stability Oversight Council
As the chairman of the Financial Stability Oversight Council, Basent is pushing the agency to more directly serve the economic growth objectives in its policy orientation. Originally formed after the financial crisis with the core mission of identifying systemic risks, the committee's focus is now gradually expanding.
Basent revealed that the council's future work will revolve around market resilience, household resilience, artificial intelligence, and crisis response. This adjustment reflects a policy-level reevaluation of new sources of risk and changes in the economic structure.
Households and Technology Become New Focus Areas
In terms of "household resilience," the Treasury Department plans to introduce more forward-looking monitoring mechanisms to identify early pressures on household balance sheets. At the same time, trends in the housing and credit markets will be key research topics.
Artificial intelligence has been explicitly included in the regulatory and stability agenda, indicating that the government now sees the impact of new technologies on the financial system as an undeniable variable.
Policy Direction Remains to be Verified
Overall, Basent's statements outline a new contour of the Trump administration's financial policy: stimulating growth momentum by relaxing regulation, provided the risks are controllable. However, whether this path can balance efficiency and safety in practice still depends on market response, economic cycle changes, and the precision of regulatory implementation.
It is foreseeable that the discussion around deregulation and financial stability will remain one of the core issues of policy debate in the United States.

