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This article is a follow-up to my recent piece on "America's Financial Oligarchy" which
was a synopsis of Simon Johnson's "The Quiet Coup" on how the financial industry
has effectively captured our government. This follow-up article is an edit
and review of a lengthy 231-page report prepared in March 2009 by the Consumer
Education Foundation (see wallstreetwatch.org/reports/sold_out.pdf for
the full report) on how, over the years, the 'Money Industry' as they refer
to the financial oligarchy, sold out America to gain such control. Like Simon's
article the Consumer Education report at wallstreetwatch.org deserves much
more exposure than it will receive in its original format and hence my effort
to distill it into a 3-page summary, with my comments where warranted, for
your quick review.
The 'Money Industry' Bought Control of America for $5.2 Billion
Harvey Rosenfield, President of the Consumer Education Foundation, contends
that "Over the last decade, Wall Street (i.e. the entire financial sector consisting
of commercial banks, accounting firms, insurance companies, securities firms
including hedge funds and private equity firms) showered Washington with over
$1.738 billion in supposed 'campaign contributions' and another $3.441 billion
on 2,996 officially registered lobbyists (more than five for each Member of
Congress) whose job it was to press for deregulation. In return for the investment
of this $5.179 billion, the Money Industry was able to get rid of many of the
reforms enacted after the Great Depression and to operate, for most of the
last ten years, without any effective rules or restraints whatsoever."
The Transfer of Power Took 25 Years
• Beginning in 1983 with the Reagan Administration, the U.S. government
acquiesced to accounting rules adopted by the financial industry that allowed
banks and other corporations to take money-losing assets off their balance
sheets in order to hide them from investors and the public.
• Between 1998 and 2000, Congress and the Clinton Administration repeatedly
blocked efforts to regulate "financial derivatives" -- including the mortgage-related
credit default swaps that became the basis of trillions of dollars in speculation.
• In 1999, Congress repealed the Depression-era law that barred banks
from offering investment and insurance services, and vice versa, enabling these
firms to engage in speculation by investing money from checking and savings
accounts into financial "derivatives" and other schemes understood by only
a handful of individuals.
• Taking advantage of historically low interest rates in the first few
years of this decade, mortgage brokers and bankers began offering mortgages
on egregious terms to purchasers who were not qualified. When these predatory
lending practices were brought to the attention of federal agencies, they refused
to take serious action. Worse, when states stepped into the vacuum by passing
laws requiring protections against dirty loans, the Bush Administration went
to court to invalidate those reforms, on the ground that the inaction of federal
agencies superseded state laws.
• The financial industry's friends in Congress made sure that those who
speculate in mortgages would not be legally liable for fraud or other illegalities
that occurred when the mortgage was made.
• Egged on by Wall Street, two government-sponsored corporations, Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac, started buying large numbers of subprime loans from private
banks as well as packages of mortgages known as "mortgage-backed securities." (See
my article entitled "Our Worst Nightmare: The Puncture of the U.S. Housing
Bubble" which outlined their house of cards approach.)
• In 2004, the Securities and Exchange Commission, now operating under
the radical deregulatory ideology of the Bush Administration, authorized investment
banks to decide for themselves how much money they were required to set aside
as rainy day reserves. Some firms then entered into $40 worth of speculative
trading for every $1 they held.
• With the compensation of CEOs increasingly tied to the value of the
firm's total assets, a tidal wave of mergers and acquisitions in the financial
world -- 11,500 between 1980 and 2005 -- led to the predominance of just a
relative handful of banks in the U.S. financial system. Successive administrations
failed to enforce antitrust laws to block these mergers. The result: less competition,
higher fees and charges for consumers, and a financial system vulnerable to
collapse if any single one of the banks ran into trouble.
• Investors and even government authorities relied on private "credit
rating" firms to review corporate balance sheets and proposed investments and
report to potential investors about their quality and safety. But the credit
rating companies had a grave conflict of interest: they are paid by the financial
firms to issue the ratings. Not surprisingly, they gave the highest ratings
to the investments issued by the firms that paid them, even as it became clear
that the ratings were inflated and the companies were in precarious condition.
The financial lobby made sure that regulation of the credit ratings firms would
not solve these problems.
None of these milestones on the road to economic ruin were kept secret, says
Rosenfield. The dangers posed by unregulated, greed-driven financial speculation
were readily apparent to any astute observer of the financial system but few
of those entrusted with the responsibility to police the marketplace were willing
to do so and those officials in government who dared to propose stronger protections
for investors and consumers consistently met with hostility and defeat. The
power of the Money Industry overcame all opposition, on a bipartisan basis.
Their Weapons of Mass Destruction were Derivatives
As Franklin Roosevelt observed seventy years ago, "our enemies of today
are the forces of privilege and greed within our own borders" and today,
says Rosenfield, their weapons of mass destruction were derivatives: pieces
of paper that were backed by other pieces of paper that were backed by packages
of mortgages, student loans and credit card debt, the complexity and value
of which only a few understood. In fact, says Rosenfield:
"America's economic system is where it is today because gambling became
the financial sector's principal preoccupation, and the pile of chips grew
so big that the Money Industry displaced real businesses that provided real
goods, services and jobs."
The Purchase of America was a LBO
Rosenfield believes that the American consumers are not to blame for this
debacle nor those who used credit in an attempt to have a decent quality of
life, nor those who agreed to accept the amazing terms for mortgages and finding
out later that they had been misled and could not afford the loan at the real
interest rate buried in the fine print. Instead of assuming any responsibility
for living beyond their means Rosenfield believes Americans are only to
blame for "allowing Wall Street to do what it calls a leveraged buy out of
our political system by spending a relatively small amount of capital in the
Capitol in order to seize control of our economy".
The Privileges of the Financial Oligarchy are Being Preserved
Rosenfield contends that the moment the Money Industry realized that the casino
had closed, it turned -- as it always does -- to Washington, this time for
the mother of all favors: a $700 billion bailout which was quickly extended
to include a feast of discount loans, loan guarantees and other taxpayer subsidies
to the tune of at least $8 trillion so far. Then, panicked by Wall Street's
threat to pull the plug on credit, Congress rebuffed efforts to include safeguards
on how taxpayer money would be spent and accounted for. Rosenfield is of the
opinion that the bankers used the bailout monies to pay bonuses, to buy back
their own bank stock, or to build their empires by purchasing other banks with
very little of the money being used for the purpose it was ostensibly given:
to make loans. He is absolutely convinced that Washington's latest giveaway
-- the Greatest Wall Street Giveaway of all time as he calls it -- has not
fixed the economy but that, at this very moment of national threat, the banks,
hedge funds and other parasite firms that crippled our economy are pouring
money into Washington to preserve their privileges at the expense of the rest
of us.
Washington Was Paid Off
That's why, according to Rosenfield, you won't hear anyone in the Washington
establishment suggest that Americans be given a seat on the Board of Directors
of every company that receives bailout money or that credit default swaps and
other derivatives should be prohibited, or limited just like slot machines,
roulette wheels and other forms of gambling. In most of the United States,
he says, you can go to jail for stealing a loaf of bread but if you have paid
off Washington, you can steal the life-savings, livelihoods, homes and dreams
of an entire nation, and you will be allowed to live in the fancy homes you
own, drive multiple cars, throw multi-million dollar birthday parties, etc.
and virtually get away with it. Sure, he points out, you might not be able
to get your bonus this year or, worst come to worst, if you are one of the
very unlucky few unable to take advantage of the loopholes in the plan announced
by the Treasury Secretary Geithner, you may end up having to live off your
past riches because you can only earn a measly $500,000.
The Money Industry Remains in Charge
Rosenfield believes that since President Obama's key appointments to the Treasury,
the SEC and other agencies, like their predecessors, are veterans of the Money
Industry that the Money Industry remains in charge of the federal agencies
and keeps our elected officials in its deep pockets and, as such, nothing will
change and that:
"if America is to recover from this economic debacle that we find ourselves
in, its people must return to the principles that made it great -- hard work,
creativity, and innovation -- and both government and business must serve
that end. Washington must serve America, not Wall Street. Things will not
change so long as Americans acquiesce to business as usual in Washington.
It's time for Americans to make their voices heard."
The report concludes that Wall Street is presently humbled, but not prostrate.
Despite siphoning trillions of dollars from the public purse, Wall Street executives
continue to warn about the perils of restricting "financial innovation" even
though it was these very innovations that led to the crisis in the first place
and they are scheming to use the coming Congressional focus on financial regulation
to centralize authority with industry- friendly agencies.
"If we are to see the meaningful regulation we need, Congress must adopt
the view that Wall Street has no legitimate seat at the table. With Wall
Street having destroyed the system that enriched its high flyers, and plunged
the global economy into deep recession, it's time for Congress to tell Wall
Street that its political investments have also gone bad. This time, legislating
must be to control Wall Street, not further Wall Street's control."
God Bless America
My recent "America's Financial Oligarchy is Still in Control" article
concluded that the country is in financial crisis and instead of the financial
oligarchy being broken up to permit essential reform they are continuing to
use their influence to prevent precisely the sorts of reforms that are needed
immediately to pull the economy out of its nosedive. Moreover, our legislators
seem unwilling to act against these powerful financiers opting instead to succumb
to their power and influence and continue to give them what they deem to be
in their best interest instead of that of the taxpayers'. Rosenfield
goes one step further in claiming that the Money Industry has, in fact, bought
control of the American political system and, in the process, betrayed America's
trust in them. They are still in control and there is no end in sight.
Indeed, the long-term consequences for America are so dire I think it is incumbent
upon us to evoke the words of the anthem "God Bless America" with its stirring
words "stand beside her and guide her." I think you would agree, regardless
of party affiliation or leanings, that America needs all the help it can get!
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