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New Finance Bill a Molehill, Not a Mountain

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Saturday, 17 July 2010 17:18
Portrait, Robert Reich, 08/16/09. (photo: Perian Flaherty)

Portrait, Robert Reich, 08/16/09. (photo: Perian Flaherty)

 

 

The New Finance Bill: A Mountain of Legislative Paper, a Molehill of Reform

hursday the President pronounced that "because of this [financial reform] bill the American people will never again be asked to foot the bill for Wall Street's mistakes."

As if to prove him wrong, Goldman Sachs simultaneously announced it had struck a deal with federal prosecutors to pay $550 million to settle federal claims it misled investor - a sum representing a mere 15 days profit for the firm based on its 2009 earnings. Goldman's share price immediately jumped 4.3 percent, and the Street proclaimed its chair and CEO, Lloyd ("Goldman is doing God's work") Blankfein, a winner. Financial analysts rushed to affirm a glowing outlook for Goldman stock.

Blankfein, you may recall, was at the meeting in late 2008 when Tim Geithner and Hank Paulson decided to bail out AIG, and thereby deliver through AIG a $13 billion no-strings-attached taxpayer windfall to Goldman. In a world where money is the measure of everything, Blankfein's power and influence have grown. Presumably, Goldman can expect more windfalls in future years.

Although the financial reform bill may have clipped some of Goldman's wings - its lucrative derivative business may require Goldman to jettison its status as a bank holding company, and the access to the Fed discount window that comes with it - the main point is that the Goldman settlement reveals everything that's weakest about the financial reform bill.

The American people will continue to have to foot the bill for the mistakes of Wall Street's biggest banks because the legislation does nothing to diminish the economic and political power of these giants. It does not cap their size. It does not resurrect the Glass-Steagall Act that once separated commercial (normal) banking from investment (casino) banking. It does not even link the pay of their traders and top executives to long-term performance. In other words, it does nothing to change their basic structure. And for this reason, it gives them an implicit federal insurance policy against failure unavailable to smaller banks - thereby adding to their economic and political power in the future.

The bill contains hortatory language but is precariously weak in the details. The so-called Volcker Rule has been watered down and delayed. Blanche Lincoln's important proposal that derivatives be traded in separate entities which aren't subsidized by commercial deposits has been shrunk and compromised. Customized derivates can remain underground. The consumer protection agency has been lodged in the Fed, whose own consumer division failed miserably to protect consumers last time around.

On every important issue the legislation merely passes on to regulators decisions about how to oversee the big banks and treat them if they're behaving badly. But if history proves one lesson it's that regulators won't and can't. They don't have the resources. They don't have the knowledge. They are staffed by people in their 30s and 40s who are paid a small fraction of what the lawyers working for the banks are paid. Many want and expect better-paying jobs on Wall Street after they leave government, and so are shrink-wrapped in a basic conflict of interest. And the big banks' lawyers and accountants can run circles around them by threatening protracted litigation.

Why do you think Goldman got off so easily from such serious charges of fraud?

Reliance on the discretion of regulators rather than structural changes in the banking system plays directly into the hands of the big banks and their executives and traders who contribute mightily to Democratic and Republican campaigns. The flow of money virtually guarantees that regulatory agencies won't be adequately staffed to enforce the law, that penalties for violations won't be overly onerous, and that all loopholes (what's a "derivative"? what has to be listed on exchanges? exactly how much capital must be on hand for which transactions? How are the various forms of predatory lending to be defined?) will be easily stretched in future years. Wall Street lawyers will have a field day. The profit-for-nothing sector of the economy (law, accounting, finance) will continue to grow buoyantly.

Make no mistake: As long as there's no fundamental change in the structure of Wall Street - as long as the big banks stay as big and are allowed to grow bigger, and have every incentive to invent new financial gimmicks with which to bet other peoples' money - they will remain too big to fail, and too politically powerful to control.

Goldman's share price, as well as those of JP Morgan Chase, Citicorps, Morgan Stanley, and Bank of America, will no doubt soar the basis of the final bill because their future profits are almost guaranteed. The pay of their executives and traders, and of the managers of hedge funds and private-equity funds they deal with, will likewise accelerate. In the short term the economy will benefit, at least to the extent financial entrepreneurship is now the apex of American wealth and innovation. But over the longer term we will be much weaker for it.

Congress has labored mightily to produce a mountain of legislation that can be called financial reform, but it has produced a molehill relative to the wreckage Wall Street wreaked upon the nation.

 

Open Article On Originating Site

Robert Reich is Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He has served in three national administrations, most recently as secretary of labor under President Bill Clinton. He has written twelve books, including "The Work of Nations," "Locked in the Cabinet," and his most recent book, "Supercapitalism." His "Marketplace" commentaries can be found on publicradio.com and iTunes.

 

Comments  

 
+14 # Guest 2010-07-17 23:05
If you want REAL change in America, the kind that takes America back from Global Corporate Control and the Rightwingnut Fringe, then stop sweating the stream of the 'This and Thats' like We are reading here today and focus on the following.

AND RELENTLESSLY DEMAND:
-BY LAW, THAT WE GET ALL BUT PUBLIC FUNDING OUT OF OUR ELECTIONS.
-ELECTION CAMPAIGNS BE LIMITED TO 4 MONTHS.
-THAT THE NARROW, TIGHT GRIP JUST A VERY FEW GLOBAL CORPORATIONS HAVE ON ALMOST ALL AMERICAN MEDIA ENTERPRISES BE BROKEN UP INTO TINY BITS AND PIECES AND SOLD OFF TO HUNDREDS OF SEPARATE, DIFFERENT AND DIVERSE AMERICAN ENTITIES.
-THAT WE REINSTITUTE A NEW, MODERN AND POWERFUL FAIRNESS DOCTRINE IN MEDIA.
-THAT GOVERNMENT STOPS CONTACTING OUT ALMOST ALL FUNCTIONS OF GOVERNMENT TO CORPORATIONS AND GOVERNMENT DOES ITS JOB AS THEE GOVERNMENT.
-ACCESS OF ALL LOBBYING BECOMES A RECORDED PUBLIC RECORD AND CAN ONLY OCCUR UNDER SUCH CIRCUMSTANCES AND IS ILLEGAL OTHERWISE.
 
 
0 # Guest 2010-07-20 02:13
Brilliant and right on the issues... unfortunately it won't happen.
 
 
+1 # Guest 2010-07-18 03:44
bank reform?
 
 
0 # Guest 2010-07-18 23:33
Banking is going to be a thing of the past. They are now re-organizing as "financial institutions" which offer "non-banking financial services" that are exempt from federal banking laws. How that will work with cheque accounts is easy -- just like phasing out returning processed cheques, the accounts themselves will be eliminated in favor of all pre-paid debit card credit accounts and credit card transactions which do not fall under federal banking laws! It is already happening with cell phone accounts!
 
 
+12 # Guest 2010-07-18 04:33
It's a lost cause. The money . It's the money . They have it, we don't . Money is power. They can buy anything they want, even the congress and the presidency. Everything else is just words that will do nothing. Health care, watered down with no single payer, so call finance reform with business as usual. Anything the few decent representatives try to put through, the majority of congress, who are prostitutes for the banks and corporations, water down. That's why Senator Fiengold didn't vote for it. Public office for private gain and to hell with the merican people who pay the freight, only there to have their collective wallets emptied by this corrupt, shameless, gov't. Only a revolution can change these entrenched criminals now.
 
 
+1 # Guest 2010-07-18 17:39
Arthur,

I agree only a revolution can chagne things temporarily. Those in power after the revolution will be just as corrupt, remember Lenin? The educated middle class is quickly disappearing. This is unsustainable without a revolution. God bless the country.
 
 
+3 # Guest 2010-07-18 06:08
Arthur, you are right in what you say, but you seem not to have noticed that Americans have been emasculated. There is absolutely no chance that these castrati will ever stage a revolution. The Americans I'm looking at now don't even have what it takes to say boo at the nation's corrupters.
 
 
+5 # Guest 2010-07-18 07:09
And this still doesn't get to the heart of the problem that our common currency is bank credit and not currency issued by the federal government. The power to issue should not be in private hands. It serves private interests and has no democratic checks. The banks can simply lend enough money to buy the world and then charge interest on top of it.
 
 
+3 # Guest 2010-07-18 08:25
Mr. Reich is far too kind when he characterizes this bill as a mountain of legislation ... but produced a molehill ...

It's the biggest pile of excrement ever produced on Capitol Hill. Why not call it the Wall Street Perpetual Universal Get-out-of-Jail-Free card (or harkening back to Bucky Fuller, another installment of the Universal Cash Heist)?

For the rest of us. Consumer protection carefully sequestered away under the power of the Fed. Spare change anyone?
 
 
-1 # Guest 2010-07-18 09:23
Other vectors are at work here-the Facists (which Mussolini defined-in a quote-as Corporatism-and he should know!) will be overtaken by uncontrollable climate and other earth shaking disasters.I also hear that there are a lot of UFOs buzzing China. Let's have another drink as the Titanic sinks and this time-there are no life boats for any of us!
 
 
+2 # Guest 2010-07-18 11:07
I warned for 10 years that Wall St. would implode & take the UNSUSTAINABLE, ARTIFICIALLY robust economy with it.
The housing boom was in fact a bubble which I also warned about. Every time I hear the phrase "creative financing" my warning lights, so to speak start flashing. I KNEW that MILLIONS would lose the over-priced homes they bought.
For one thing there was no justification for the increased value of property. It normally increases in value about 3%-6% a year. There was NO jobs boom, at least GOOD PAYING ones (aerospace manufacturing, auto manufacturing, etc.) like in past housing booms.
 
 
+2 # Guest 2010-07-18 11:14
You CAN'T have a solid economy that is based on people going into debt & at the same time pushing down wages by bringing in foreign workers to replace Americans in the jobs that couldn't be outsourced. In fact we have sold off many of our assets to foreign companies, companies that used to be American like RCA, Lucent Technology, Frigidaire, Atlantic Richfield Oil, Zenith, to name a few. Whole industries are now controlled or owned by foreign interests, (cement, publishing, movie making, etc). see EconomyInCrisis .org
All this with the DEREGULATION OF Wall St. & done with the blessing of those we elected, allowed this to happen. IT WAS NO ACCIDENT!!!!

And I was told that I was crazy & didn't know what the hell I was talking about (that was the nice one) when I warned what was going to happen. I said it was just a matter of time. Still nobody believed me except a few family members.
 
 
+3 # Guest 2010-07-18 11:28
This is the best that Congress can produce because of the necessary votes it takes to pass legislation. Is this not better than doing nothing?! What would we have gotten with Republican rule? When we criticize this administration’ s efforts, there should be some recognition that were the Republicans in power we would get more deregulation and lower taxes for the rich which would continue the destruction of our economy. Otherwise, all of this criticism will once again bring the Republicans to power. Instead, we need to promote the election of more Democrats (with the help of Robert Reich) that will eventually lead to improved legislation. Don’t just criticize the efforts to improve things, criticize the ideology that got us here!
 
 
-4 # Guest 2010-07-18 11:35
The problems and their solutions would all have seemed so obvious to the Americans of the Progressive Era (presidents T.Roosevelt to Wilson) who put an end to the Gilded Age. The Federal Reserve was set up by federal law in 1913 in order to prevent private enterprise banking from controlling the money supply and the interest rate. Same year for the progressive income tax which the rich pay at higher rates than the poor. I suspect that far too many Americans skipped over that period in high school US History in their haste to get to those fascinating World Wars. Did Blankfein or Greenspan (e.g.) ever know or care about the invention of the independent quasi-judicial federal regulatory commission. Well it's no less great an idea just the same.
 
 
+1 # Guest 2010-07-18 14:45
BRAVO DurangoKid !! You are correct - "The power to issue money should NOT be in private hands". U.S.Constitution, Article # 1, Sec.#8 : 'Congress shall have power....to coin money, etc.' What-The-Hell Wm R. Everdell is saying is exactly ass-backward. The FedResSys IS - in fact - "private enterprise banking" composed of a consortium of privately held, for-profit banks who DO "control the money supply & set interest rates". The officers of the FedRes are paid, NOT by the government, but by the consortium of System-involved private banks. William is correct about the year - 1913 - that the "bill" was snuck-in at the time of Congress' Christmas recess. Alas, he's not correct about much else. He sounds rather like a plutophiliac.
 
 
-1 # Guest 2010-07-18 23:47
You did notice, didn't you, that if you click the red-colored comment button in the upper right corner of William R. Everdell's comment, that it takes away his comment value, and when I did so to his zero rating so far, it produced a minus 1 rating! Am I the only one who disagrees with William Everdell's comment who voted "bad comment" ?????
 
 
0 # Guest 2010-07-18 20:24
Hidden shadow derivative trading, long and SHORT via co-placement HW units w/ proprietary OSs w/in 300' of the NYSE that beat the worldwide universal order flow by 30 - 40 ms (1/2" front-end trades allegedly stopped) on a simple linear equation quant app on t = v/d @ SoL = 186,000smps yielding a priori order flows to front-end w/ full knowledge & gratuitous advantage ex:.0005 scalp profit "Free market, free trade, free lunch letter of credit, get it back on the retail side," aka, Nominal market divestment [Sic] bank consumption, extraction, gather of OPM communism NOT based upon real economy corporate production, investment, earnings, innovation capital expedition toward growth, jobs, and national security. Differential Market = retail only. Integral Economy = mfg/grower producer, outlet, jobber, wholesaler, retailer, customer. Calc 101 Theorem.
Those who crashed the HMS Titanic into the iceberg got TARP'd-up lifeboats, stripping that, now going for limbs of those swimming for it.
 
 
+1 # Guest 2010-07-18 23:08
I posted this in my blog, LibrisFidelis@y ahoogroups.com :

This is typical O'Bam-ya talk...

This bill is not exactly like the HR-676 scam, which was a blank cheque to the insurance corporations, but it resembles it in far more legalese terminology...

We need Democracy in this country NOW! We are not getting it with anti-Democrats and corporate-communist Repugnicans...

O'Bam-ya needs to be exposed for being The Establishment political prostitute and liar that he is! Not to mention that probably 99% of our "elected" Congress in both houses are liars, as well! There are NO Noam Chomskys in Congress, not a one! The so-called "Wallstreet's mistake" was no mistake, it was deliberate scheming and manipulation intended to be free of government intervention as the result of Repugnican Party politics that castrated our government's oversight and legal system.
 

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