The regulatory system "was fundamentally too fragile and unstable and it did a bad job of protecting consumers and investors," said Geithner, who spoke at a Time Warner (TWX, Fortune 500) summit on the economy. Time Warner is the parent of CNNMoney.com.
Geithner addressed the main objectives of the new regulatory system, although he was not willing to discuss specific details of the proposal prior to the official unveiling by Obama on Wednesday.
The U.S. financial system is far less centralized than other mature economies, according to Geithner, pointing to the between 8,000 and 9,000 banks throughout the country. To hold a vast system accountable, he said that there has to be a more centralized regulation system.
"At the core of making the system stronger is to give one place clear accountability and responsibility," he said.
Focus on reform: In a commentary published in Monday's Washington Post, Geithner and the Director of the National Economic Council, Lawrence Summers, said the proposal would grant the Federal Reserve increased power in the oversight and management of the largest financial companies in the market.
It would also create an agency like the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., to oversee consumer-oriented financial products.
The two men wrote that the plan would point to the need for deeper cash reserves at major financial institutions. Those firms -- whose operations affect other, smaller institutions -- will be moderated by a consortium of Federal Reserve leaders.
In addition, the proposal intends to impose stricter reporting standards for asset-backed securities in an attempt to prevent a housing boom and subsequent bust like the one that catalyzed the current downturn, the two men wrote.
The housing collapse, fueled by the popularization of subprime mortgages, was evidence of weak consumer protection, Geithner and Summers wrote, adding that the proposal Obama will unveil Wednesday works to continue to protect consumers.
Another component of the plan, which "will be available only in extraordinary circumstances," according to Geithner and Summers, creates an option to dissolve financial companies that are too big to fail.
"It will help ensure that the government is no longer forced to choose between bailouts and financial collapse," they wrote.
The proposal will also pledge to lead a global overhaul in regulation.
Proposal still has to face Congress: Obama's proposal would require congressional approval before any of the changes are adopted. Geithner is set to testify about the plan before Congress on Thursday.
The plan will meet with opposition from those opposed to giving the government a more heavy hand in the financial marketplace.
While Geithner acknowledged the importance of competition to create innovation in a market economy, he was also unwavering in the defense of increased regulation.
"We are not going to go back to where it was. We can't," he said Monday. "The damage of the crisis was just too acute."
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