Last Friday, Bill Moyers sat down for an hour with Simon Johnson and James Kwak (authors of The Baseline Scenario and 13 Bankers: The Wall Street Takeover and the Next Financial Meltdown.) Watch it in two parts here. The topic of the day was (and will continue to be for the next month or so) financial regulation in the wake of financial meltdown. Among other arguments, Johnson and Kwak make the case for breaking up America's big banks financial oligarchy. They, with Bill Moyers ever-thoughtful-guidance, help us better understand the the deeds, misdeeds, and too-often blind ideological missteps that brought us to the edge of the abyss, and that keep us in bondage to those who ought have been more concerned with our collective progress than with lining their own pockets with gold.
I continue to be somewhat agnostic on setting up a "size rule" for large financial institutions, but Johnson and Kwak have me leaning in their direction right now. Here is a snip (from the transcript) arguing for breaking up the big banks:
SIMON JOHNSON: . . . [I say] to all my Republican friends: on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, you were right. They became too big to fail. They captured Congress. They were known as some of the most formidable financial lobbyists in the 1990s. They argued for the rights to take on these kinds of risks, okay?
And the Republicans were right. The Republicans called them on this. But now it's the big private banks that have the same incentive structure. That have bulked themselves up so big that you can't let them fail. That's what we saw in September 2008. Hank Paulson looked at his options. And they are all pretty awful. And I'm not a big fan of Hank Paulson, but I think the moment where he looked at it, he was right. That if you let JPMorgan Chase or Goldman Sachs fail, the consequences would have been devastating, because they're so big. It's a Fannie May and Freddie Mac structure come to Wall Street, come to the top guys on Wall Street. And our Republican colleagues and friends should recognize this, they should acknowledge it. And then we can all fix this together.
I also found this commentary on the hedge fund "Magnetar" particularly interesting. It foreshadows what may yet be revealed about many others in the financial industry:
JAMES KWAK: Magnetar is a hedge fund which means that other people gave them money to invest. And their job is to make as much money as possible. And these were the smart guys in the room. They saw that the system was broken. And they found a specific way to exploit it. And they knew that they could go for example, they could go to Wall Street banks and the banks would collaborate in making these extremely toxic securities. Because they knew what the bankers incentives were. They knew that the banker's incentives were to do the deal, to do the transaction, to get the fees up front. And they knew that there was nobody watching out for the investors. There was nobody watching out to make sure that securities they manufactured were actually good securities. But essentially what they were doing is they wanted to short the housing market. And they shorted the market in such a way that they actually made the problem worse, because what they did is they encouraged they tried to create these very toxic securities explicitly so that they could then short those securities. And that's why in a sense, they were they were shorting the American Dream. But what the real story of Magnetar, I think, is that they were exploiting a system that was deeply broken.
So, we like to think that the financial system we have in Wall Street are set up so that as people try to make lots of money they are they are indirectly helping the economy by making sure their capital goes where it's needed most. What the Magnetar story shows us that this is a casino, where you can make money you can make money exploiting the weaknesses in the casino. And it has nothing to do with the American Dream. It has nothing to do with making sure that capital goes to the places where it's needed most.
Watch the rest of the story. I'll try to update this post as (or if) I see others commenting on on the Moyers, Johnson, Kwak tale. American Oligarchs and their Minions, "Take One" is here.
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