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The US
- now world - financial crisis has given nations a golden
opportunity, but will they seize it,
asks Eric Walberg
This Wall Street bailout
- yes, bailout, not "rescue" - is yet another boondoggle by the
neocons, pulled out of bankers' back pockets, and being enacted
in an atmosphere of panic orchestrated and spread around the
world to make sure it got passed ASAP. A bankers' 9/11: implode
a few bank towers to make sure the system as a whole survives.
As the dust settles, it
is clear that nothing much about our casino capitalism is about
to change at all. But what is to be expected from the likes of
United States President George W Bush? Joseph Stiglitz comments,
"This 'cure' is another one of these rearrangements: by
stripping out the bad assets from the banks and paying fair
market value for them, the value of the banks will soar." It is
a ruse based on the "trickle-down economics" made famous by
president Ronald Reagan. Throw enough money at Wall Street and a
few drops are sure to hit Joe Public.
Legislation that shows a
corner is being turned, a new leaf turned over, would require
addressing issues such as the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the
monstrous military budget, the even bigger trade deficit, the
massive tax cuts to the rich over the past 28 years, the very
debt-based system of money creation - none of which got the time
of day as legislators prepare to end their final working session
this year. But then even a Barack Obama would not be able to
extricate himself from the spider's web that is the US political
system today, as his hearty support for the bill and support of
President George W Bush show. Funny how Federal Reserve Chairman
Ben Bernanke, accompanied by Secretary of the Treasury Henry
Paulson, seemed to pull the $700 billion 450-page Emergency
Economic Stabilisation Act out of his hat like a magician.
Was this plan in the
wings, just waiting for its chance in the spotlight? And does it
make sense to let the fox work out a plan to save the chickens
as they come home to roost? Isn't it more likely that he will
ensure the long life of his progeny first, always keeping in
mind that enough chickens must be kept alive to reproduce and
feed the foxes? To use another metaphor, does it make sense to
put the pilot who hit the iceberg in charge of the lifeboats?
Adam Smith writes in The
Wealth of Nations: "The proposal of any new law or regulation of
commerce which comes from this order [profit takers], ought
always to be listened to with great precaution, and ought never
to be adopted till after having been long and carefully
examined, not only with the most scrupulous, but most suspicious
attention. It comes from an order of men, whose interest is
never exactly the same with that of the public, who have
generally an interest to deceive and even to oppress the public,
and who accordingly have, upon many occasions, both deceived and
oppressed it."
Instead, it was
railroaded through Congress and the Senate in a mood of
hysteria, irresponsibly orchestrated by the very foxes who
created the problem. The plan is intended to infuse the
financial system with cash to "thaw" frozen credit markets (as
if it is a natural process) and prevent a deep recession. So
where have the $600 billions in tax cuts over the past eight
years gone? Isn't printing more dollars like pouring water
through a sieve? And is yet another $150 billion in tax breaks
over the next 10 years really the answer?
The programme will send
the federal deficit through the roof, even as it approaches
record levels. The Treasury will have to borrow the money,
requiring a bill increasing the government's legal debt limit by
- surprise - $700 billion, to $11.3 trillion.
In the early 1990s,
Sweden fought off a similar meltdown, also brought on by
deregulation, which involved giving the government good as well
as bad assets, and it survived. There is also "the Buffett
model": Warren Buffet put money into Goldman Sachs, getting
preferred shares and warrants, i.e., both protection when prices
slide and participation when they stabilise. This would have
worked better as a way to save the banks and protect taxpayers,
even if it didn't address the underlying problems.
Two bright spots:
insurance for deposit accounts was increased from $100,000 to
$250,000 and pay for senior executives at firms participating in
the programme was capped. CEO salaries have skyrocketed in the
past two decades; for instance, Lehman Brothers' Richard Fuld
received $466 million from 1993-2008 and a whopping $62 million
"golden parachute" exit pay on resigning last month, as his firm
chalked up a $6 billion loss and declared bankruptcy. Executive
"pay" does not include the de rigueur hefty stock options and
perks. Treasury may now ban excessive salaries and bonuses, as
well as these golden parachutes for executives at firms that
receive direct infusions of federal cash. Companies that sell
assets in government auctions will lose tax deductions if
salaries for their top executives exceed $500,000 a year, and
outgoing managers who take severance packages triple their
annual salaries will be required to pay a 20 per cent excise
tax.
There are still those
who have the chutzpah to protest against attempts to cap these
salaries. "The bailout is about saving the economy, while
executive pay is a separate, and complex, issue," says corporate
governance expert at the University of Delaware Charles Elson.
"It is not appropriate for government to be setting the salaries
of executives," said Scott Talbott, senior vice-president for
government affairs at the Financial Services Roundtable, a trade
lobbyist. But not even the foxes are listening to such whining
anymore. Paul Hodgson of the Corporate Library cuts through this
cant: "This financial crisis is a direct result of the
compensation practices at these Wall Street firms."
That Hodgson is spot-on
is revealed by the intrigues of Joseph Cassano, head of AIG's
London Financial Production office from 1987-2007. He used this
obscure operation as a base to amass a fortune, specialising in
such suspect "plain vanilla" products as "interest rate swaps"
and "collateral debt obligations" (CDOs), and even dreamed up
"credit default swap insurance" for these CDOs. There was never
any intention of paying out any "insurance" claims - it was
simply an old fashion pyramid scheme which netted Cassano
personally hundreds of millions. He resigned last year as AIG
went into the red, in part dragged down by his operations, and
refuses to speak to the media. Multiply this by a few tens
of thousands and it begins to add up.
However, there were lots
of the usual pork barrel treats added to sweeten the bill and
ensure its passage, including a 39-cent tax break for an Oregon
firm that makes children's wooden arrows, tax breaks for Alaska
fishermen and Samoan businessmen, $128 million for race-car
track manufacturers, tax breaks to small television and film
producers and for the production - none of which has anything to
do with the crisis.
Senator John McCain's
attempts to tar Senator Barack Obama for merely consulting with
the former chief executive of Fannie Mae - a contention hotly
denied by the Obama campaign - backfired when it was revealed
that Freddie Mac was paying McCain's campaign manager, Rick
Davis, $15,000 a month until two months ago - a total of $2.5
million since 2000, betting on McCain to be the Republican
nominee. McCain previously insisted that Davis had had no
involvement with the mortgage company for the past several
years.
The $700 billion
boondoggle has been passed, with a virtual carte blanche for the
Treasury secretary and the Federal Reserve chairman, the foxes,
to pay their canid friends whatever they want - for their
mistakes. The original proposal gave the secretary unlimited
power to spend the $700 billion, not just on mortgages, but on
any "financial instrument" he liked. This was tightened
somewhat, with two boards, including an "independent"
congressional panel, an "independent" inspector general (shades
of Gogol) and an oversight board staffed by the treasury and
housing secretaries and the Federal Reserve chairman. Yes,
oversight by the foxes and a Congress beholden to lobbyists.
This will be sure to do the trick.
Absolutely no mention
was made of the more than $500 billion which the Iraq war has
cost in the past five years, the $600 billion in tax cuts since
Bush came to power, the $650 billion military budget, or the
$850 billion trade deficit. Cumulative borrowing from abroad
during the six years of the Bush administration amounts to $5
trillion. The $700 billion figure begins to pale in comparison
to this profligacy and mismanagement.
In these final months of
his presidency, Bush has pulled another weasel out of his hat,
pushing through a policy that rewards his criminal friends and
avoids any need to reverse his disastrous foreign and domestic
policies. Yet commentators feel sorry for him, calling it a
hollow victory. He is finally being forced to eat some crow,
they say, made to preside over the biggest government
intervention in decades, largely abandoned by his fellow
Republicans in the House. His CEO friends will find their wings
clipped and their golden parachutes taken away. And, if the plan
has lost money after five years, his successor must submit a
plan to Congress for recouping those losses from the financial
industry, perhaps through new fees or a tax on securities
transactions.
The ultimate irony here
is that the Titanic took the lives of the rich as well as the
poor. At least in those days, there was a sense of honour which
allowed the innocent women and children to escape. Imagine the
Titanic today: as the ship sinks, all are scrambling without any
sense of shame for the lifeboats, abandoning any attempt to
patch the huge holes - which could easily be done given the will
- resulting in one and all being swallowed by the abyss.
A real rescue plan
The financial bailout is
not a plan that fundamentally alters the relationship between
government and business, as is being touted. It will not solve
the underlying crisis that the US finds itself in. It will
fundamentally alter the relationship between the US and the
world, but more because of the panic it precipitated and the
accumulated effects of the other disastrous policies of the Bush
era - the wars, the deficits in trade and the budget. Therein
lies the golden lining. The neocon con is over. The public
outrage should be mobilised to push for a real solution. What
would a sober plan look like?
- For starters, it would
require the government to renationalise Freddie Mac and Fannie
Mae, paying the current market value for the bad assets, not a
penny more, and taking all loans, both good and bad. Why should
the government only take over the culprits' bad loans? After
all, the management of these once-upon-a-time government
agencies - intended to help the poor purchase homes - having
filled its pockets, has left behind a mess. But many of these
bad debts are made up of such fraudulent "investments" as CDOs,
and are now so convoluted, they could well be worth nothing. The
foxes insist that when the market rebounds, the government will
magically be able to sell the bad loans at a profit. This sounds
suspiciously like the strategy in the early 1990s during the
Savings & Loan scandal, which rewarded the culprits and cost the
taxpayer $350 billion. Caveat emptor.
- The Glass-Steagall
Act, passed in the wake of the stock market crash of 1929, and
designed to separate banking from securities activities, should
be immediately reinstated. It was repealed by Congress in 1999
(guess who lobbied for its repeal?), allowing banks to make fast
money from risky investments in securities and derivatives, and
led to the subprime scandal earlier this year. The entire swamp
of "financial services" should be drained and strictly
controlled in future.
- As part of a clean-up
of the financial sector, the failed and failing banks should be
put under direct government control, their records opened to
independent investigators. Culprits should be prosecuted and
lose their ill-gotten gains (in as much as they are accessible,
considering the ubiquitous offshore banking system). Salaries of
CEOs and management would be adjusted in line with government
salaries.
- There should be a
moratorium on housing foreclosures. Instead of handing $700
billion over to the banks, the government should use it to pay
off all delinquent mortgages. This is the proposal of the Yale
School of Management's Jonathan Koppell and William Goetzmann. Mortgage
rates should be capped, and lenders should take part of the
beating by agreeing to renegotiate mortgage values in light of
the falling values.
- Taxes should be
increased - returned to their pre-Reagan progressive rates -
rather than decreased. The negative savings rate in the US is
the elephant in the room, with few people producing real goods,
and virtually everyone living on credit. US citizens must own up
to their flight from reality.
- The
deindustrialisation of America must be stopped. If the country
produces only arms and dubious pieces of paper, there is no way
it will be able to pull itself out of the hole it has dug.
- The poison that is
euphemistically called the international financial system must
be radically reformed. The G8 (sorry, G7) should be mobilised to
enact legislation ending offshore banking - used to launder
money and keep illegal earnings out of the hands of
investigators. British Prime Minister Gordon Brown has called
for a new global financial regulatory system and he should be
given an immediate "yes".
- Speculation on
"floating" currencies, which rakes in billions every day for
speculators, must end. For 30 years, even mainstream economists
such as James Tobin have been urging the taxation of earnings
made from speculation on currency fluctuations, the so-called
Tobin tax, with the goal of reducing this practice and the
instability it causes. In effect, it allows speculators like
George Soros to rob the broad citizenry of the world. Tobin's
idea is to tax the Soroses and give the proceeds to third world
development. Better yet, exchange rates could be fixed and
adjusted in an orderly fashion to prevent such speculation and
the undermining of economies it leads to.
- Most important, the US
government must be forced to abandon its reckless policy of war
and militarism, and reign in its profligate spending, issues
which so far have been entirely absent from the debate.
To those that howl that
all this amounts to socialism, so be it. Remember Northern Rock,
the British building society that suffered a run on it last year
and was nationalised? With more and British banks needing
rescues these days, public confidence has become so fragile that
Northern Rock is now seen as the best place for savings because
its deposits are fully guaranteed by the government. Socialism
works. There Is No Alternative - TINA - as former prime minister
Margaret Thatcher loved to spout about capitalism. While private
pension funds fold, Social Security plods on. By going too far
in filling their pockets, banks have proved the bankruptcy of
the entire system.
Some of this sense has
"trickled down" into the revised plan. The FBI has opened 26
investigations into fraud by the failing giants, though as with
the investigation of the Enron collapse in 2003 there is little
likelihood that - leaving aside sudden mysterious death - any
culprits will suffer more than a handslap. Finance Services
Committee Chairman Barney Frank said he plans to rewrite housing
finance laws, broaden executive pay limits to more corporations
and pursue new regulations to rein in excessive risk-taking on
Wall Street.
Such rearguard actions
are mere crumbs. What is most shocking of all in this latest
Bush-induced crisis is that the neocons created a worldwide
panic to railroad through a bailout which leaves the criminals
in control of the world's financial system and their rules of
play intact.
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Eric Walberg writes for
Al-Ahram Weekly. You can reach him at
www.geocities.com/walberg2002/
Source:
http://www.rense.com/general83/bankers.htm
Picture
added to the article by GLF from
www.DeesIllustration.com
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