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Among them: How will the fee be assessed? Administration officials already have ruled out a fee on financial transactions. Also, will banks be required to pay for the billions of dollars in assistance the federal government gave General Motors, Chrysler LLC and AIG? An industry official said consideration of a levy now would be premature. "Current law doesn't trigger this tax proposal for another four years," said Scott Talbott, chief lobbyist for the Financial Services Roundtable, an industry group for some of the largest financial firms. "We look forward to seeing the details of the complexity of the formula, of who it's applied to and what the assessment is based on and when it is applied," he said. Banks have been repaying their infusions, in part to get out from under compensation limits imposed on the bailout recipients. Banks have also paid dividends from the government help. According to the crisis-driven 2008 law that created the bailout fund, the status of TARP must be assessed by late 2013, five years after it passed. "In any case where there is a shortfall," the statute says, "the president shall submit a legislative proposal that recoups from the financial industry an amount equal to the shortfall in order to ensure that the Troubled Asset Relief Program does not add to the deficit or national debt." Obama has been strident in his criticism of bankers, calling them "fat cats" last month in an interview that aired on the eve of their visit to the White House. With public anger over the bailout still strong, Obama has embraced populist rhetoric in an effort to shame bank executives into paying back the government more quickly and their executives less lavishly. Funds collected from such a levy would go to pay down the $1.4 trillion deficit amid the Obama-backed stimulus package and aid to Detroit's automakers. Washington spent about $245 billion to help banks in the Troubled Asset Relief Program, much less than President George W. Bush's Treasury Department secured to keep financial firms afloat. So far, $162 billion of that has been repaid, including $20 billion each from Citigroup and Bank of America under a special targeted program.
[Associated
Press;
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