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Financial-market wise guys, who had been seized with fear, are suddenly
drunk with hope. They are rallying explosively because they think they
have successfully stampeded Washington into accepting the Wall Street
Journal solution to the crisis: dump it all on the taxpayers. That
is the meaning of the massive bailout Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson
has shopped around Congress. It would relieve the major banks and
investment firms of their mountainous rotten assets and make the public
swallow their losses--many hundreds of billions, maybe much more. What's
not to like if you are a financial titan threatened with extinction? If Wall Street gets away with this, it will represent an historic
swindle of the American public--all sugar for the villains, lasting pain
and damage for the victims. My advice to Washington politicians: Stop,
take a deep breath and examine what you are being told to do by
so-called "responsible opinion." If this deal succeeds, I predict it
will become a transforming event in American politics--exposing the deep
deformities in our democracy and launching a tidal wave of righteous
anger and popular rebellion. As I have been saying for several months,
this crisis has the potential to bring down one or both political
parties, take your choice.
Christopher Whalen of Institutional Risk Analytics, a brave conservative
critic, put it plainly: "The joyous reception from Congressional
Democrats to Paulson's latest massive bailout proposal smells an awful
lot like yet another corporatist lovefest between Washington's one-party
government and the Sell Side investment banks."
A kindred critic, Josh Rosner of Graham Fisher in New York, defined the
sponsors of this stampede to action: "Let us be clear, it is not citizen
groups, private investors, equity investors or institutional investors
broadly who are calling for this government purchase fund. It is almost
exclusively being lobbied for by precisely those institutions that
believed they were 'smarter than the rest of us,' institutions who need
to get those assets off their balance sheet at an inflated value lest
they be at risk of large losses or worse."
Let me be clear. The scandal is not that government is acting. The
scandal is that government is not acting forcefully enough--using its
ultimate emergency powers to take full control of the financial system
and impose order on banks, firms and markets. Stop the music, so to
speak, instead of allowing individual financiers and traders to take
opportunistic moves to save themselves at the expense of the system. The
step-by-step rescues that the Federal Reserve and Treasury have executed
to date have failed utterly to reverse the flight of investors and banks
worldwide from lending or buying in doubtful times. There is no obvious
reason to assume this bailout proposal will change their minds, though
it will certainly feel good to the financial houses that get to dump
their bad paper on the government.
A serious intervention in which Washington takes charge would, first,
require a new central authority to supervise the financial institutions
and compel them to support the government's actions to stabilize the
system. Government can apply killer leverage to the financial
players: accept our objectives and follow our instructions or you are
left on your own--cut off from government lending spigots and ineligible
for any direct assistance. If they decline to cooperate, the money guys
are stuck with their own mess. If they resist the government's orders to
keep lending to the real economy of producers and consumers, banks and
brokers will be effectively isolated, therefore doomed.
Only with these conditions, and some others, should the federal
government be willing to take ownership--temporarily--of the rotten
financial assets that are dragging down funds, banks and brokerages.
Paulson and the Federal Reserve are trying to replay the bailout
approach used in the 1980s for the savings and loan crisis, but this
situation is utterly different. The failed S&Ls held real
assets--property, houses, shopping centers--that could be readily resold
by the Resolution Trust Corporation at bargain prices. This crisis
involves ethereal financial instruments of unknowable value--not just
the notorious mortgage securities but various derivative contracts and
other esoteric deals that may be virtually worthless.
Despite what the pols in Washington think, the RTC bailout was also a
Wall Street scandal. Many of the financial firms that had financed the
S&L industry's reckless lending got to buy back the same properties
for pennies from the RTC--profiting on the upside, then again on the
downside. Guess who picked up the tab? I suspect Wall Street is
envisioning a similar bonanza--the chance to harvest new profit from
their own fraud and criminal irresponsibility.
If government acts responsibly, it will impose some other conditions on
any broad rescue for the bankers. First, take due bills from any
financial firms that get to hand off their spoiled assets, that is, a
hard contract that repays government from any future profits once the
crisis is over. Second, when the politicians get around to reforming
financial regulations and dismantling the gimmicks and "too big to fail"
institutions, Wall Street firms must be prohibited from exercising their
usual manipulations of the political system. Call off their lobbyists,
bar them from the bribery disguised as campaign contributions. Any
contact or conversations between the assisted bankers and financial
houses with government agencies or elected politicians must be promptly
reported to the public, just as regulated industries are required to do
when they call on government regulars.
More important, if the taxpayers are compelled to refinance the villains
in this drama, then Americans at large are entitled to equivalent
treatment in their crisis. That means the suspension of home
foreclosures and personal bankruptcies for debt-soaked families during
the duration of this crisis. The debtors will not escape injury and
loss--their situation is too dire--but they deserve equal protection
from government, the chance to work out things gradually over some years
on reasonable terms.
The government, meanwhile, may have to create another emergency agency,
something like the New Deal, that
lends directly to the real economy--businesses, solvent banks, buyers
and sellers in consumer markets. We don't know how much damage has been
done to economic growth or how long the cold spell will last, but I
don't trust the bankers in the meantime to provide investment capital
and credit. If necessary, Washington has to fill that role, too.
Finally, the crisis is global, obviously, and requires concerted global
action. Robert A. Johnson, a veteran of global finance now working with
the Campaign for America's
Future, suggests that our global trading partners may recognize the
need for self-interested cooperation and can negotiate temporary--maybe
permanent--reforms to balance the trading system and keep it
functioning, while leading nations work to put the global financial
system back in business.
The agenda is staggering. The United States is ill equipped to deal with
it smartly, not to mention wisely. We have a brain-dead lame duck in the
White House. The two presidential candidates are trapped by events,
trying to say something relevant without getting blamed for the
disaster. The people should make themselves heard in Washington, even if
only to share their outrage. //William Greider //22.09.08
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