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US Treasury plan shields Wall Street speculators
By Andre Damon and Barry Grey
1 April 2008
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US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson on Monday presented a broad
plan to revamp the American financial regulatory system. The proposal,
while giving the Federal Reserve Board expanded trouble-shooting
powers over financial markets and institutions, would actually
weaken federal oversight of Wall Street investment banks and leave
virtually untouched the vast, unregulated secondary, or derivatives,
markets.
Speaking barely two weeks after the Fed intervened to prevent
the bankruptcy of the investment bank Bear Stearns and announced
massive loans to other Wall Street firms to avert a meltdown of
the financial system, Paulsons Blueprint for Financial
Regulatory Reform underscores the determination of the most
powerful sections of the financial establishment to block any
measures that would limit their ability to generate profits and
multi-million-dollar compensation packages from various forms
of financial speculation.
Paulson largely cast the proposal as a response to the bursting
of the US housing bubble and the subprime mortgage crisis that
have resulted in tens of billions of dollars in losses for major
banks and a crisis of confidence in the entire US credit system.
In fact, his department began drafting the plan last spring as
a proposal to further deregulate the American financial system
and make it even more profitable and more competitive against
foreign rivals in Europe and elsewhere.
Paulson, a former Nixon aide and Wall Street executive, has
long advocated further moves to limit government regulation of
the banks and financial houses. He was the CEO of Goldman Sachs,
the biggest US investment bank, before taking over as Bushs
treasury secretary in 2006, and personally benefited from the
fast-and-loose risk-taking on Wall Street that was encouraged
under both Republican and Democratic administrations. His compensation
package, according to reports, was $37 million in 2005 and $16.4
million projected for 2006. His net worth has been estimated at
over $700 million.
Not surprisingly, neither in Paulsons remarks nor in
the 214 pages of the plan he released is there any suggestion
that Wall Street firms or their top executives be called to account
and held legally culpable for the economic and social disaster
that has resulted from their reckless and often deceptive, if
not outright illegal, policies and actions.
Paulsons remarks contained the typical euphemisms employed
to mask the depth of the economic crisis. Markets are pricing
and reassessing risk, he said, referring to the collapse
of the massively inflated values of securities backed by subprime
mortgages and other forms of speculation.
He sought to reassure Wall Street by declaring, I am
not suggesting that more regulation is the answer, and hailed
the repeal in 1999 of the Glass-Steagall Act as a great advance.
Glass-Steagall, passed at the height of the Great Depression in
1933 in response to revelations of swindling and fraud by major
banks and financial houses, made it illegal for a commercial bank,
which accepts deposits from individuals, to also function as an
investment bank. The removal of this restriction contributed to
the super-heated speculative environment that led to the current
financial crisis.
He also declared, I do not believe it is fair or accurate
to blame our regulatory structure for the current market turmoil.
This blameless structure allowed, for example, credit-rating
agencies, paid by financial firms to rate securities issued by
the same firms, to give AAA ratings to subprime-backed debt, and
accounting firms to allow mortgage lenders to book losses as profits.
The Treasury Department blueprint is divided into proposals
for the near, medium and long term. In the near-term, it calls
for an expansion of the authority and membership of the Presidents
Working Group on Financial Markets, which was initiated following
the stock market crash of 1987 and presently includes the chairman
of the Federal Reserve Board, the treasury secretary, the head
of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the head of the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
The plan also calls for the establishment of a Mortgage Origination
Commission to increase federal oversight over the licensing and
conduct of mortgage brokers.
Intermediate-term recommendations include greater Federal Reserve
oversight of US payment and settlement systems, and the merger
of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). This latter proposal would
effectively lessen federal oversight of stock, bond and commodities
exchanges as well as investment banks, since the more lax procedures
of the CFTC would prevail.
The plan also calls for measures to increase federal oversight
of insurance companies and closing down of the Office of Thrift
Supervision, which presently oversees savings and loans institutions.
In the longer-term, which Paulson acknowledged would take years
to carry through, the Treasury plan envisions a tri-partite federal
regulatory system, with the Fed largely stripped of its current
day-to-day oversight of commercial banks and instead given expanded
powers to trouble-shoot over the entire array of financial institutions
and markets. Under the Treasury plan, the Fed could inspect the
books of any bank, investment bank, hedge fund, private equity
firm or insurance company and order remedial actionsuch
as greater capital reservesbut only if the Fed deemed the
practices of the company in question to pose a systemic
threat to the financial system.
The Feds current role in overseeing commercial banks
and other depository institutions would be taken over by a new
Prudential Financial Regulator. Significantly, the mandate of
this new agency would not extend to investment banks, even though
investment banks have now been given access to government-backed
loans at the Feds discount window.
Finally, there would be a Conduct of Business Regulator to
oversee the conduct of financial firms to protect consumers and
investors.
The immense growth of the American financial sector over the
past several decades was fueled by a series of asset bubbles and
made possible by the US dollars preeminent role in the structure
of world capitalism, which allowed the US to run deficits and
accumulate imbalances of a size unthinkable in any other country.
But the period in which the US ruling elite could rack up profits
while letting its infrastructure and productive capacity crumble
was by its very nature transitory. The current crisis represents
the beginnings of a global readjustment and the formation of a
new balance of economic power, to the detriment of American capitalism.
The current crisis is the culmination of a protracted decline
in the global economic position of American capitalism, partially
masked in the past by a vast growth of financial speculation and
parasitism. It is not, as Paulson said in his remarks on Monday,
merely one of the periods of market stress that recur
every five to ten years.
See Also:
Clinton, Obama, McCain defer
to Wall Street
[29 May 2008]
Home prices, consumer confidence
plunge in US
[26 March 2008]
Recessionary trends deepen,
sparking gyrations on stock, commodities markets
[22 March 2008]
Shades of 1929: Bear Stears
collapse signals deepest crisis since Great Depression
[18 March 2008]
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