The
Bailout
The $700
Billion Bailout: One More Weapon of Mass Deception
By
Richard W. Behan
Not since the Bush administration's
lies about
The Bush administration's proposal
to buy, with taxpayers' money, $700 billion of toxic liabilities from the
corporate financial titans of Wall Street is a fraud. It is by no means
necessary, as Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson claims in the agency's Fact
Sheet, "to promote market stability, and help protect American families
and the
It is
necessary only to assure the financial survival of Wall Street banks and
brokerages, the administration's most loyal supporters and its greatest
political contributors - and in large measure the cause of the financial
meltdown the country is facing.
These financial corporations lobbied
ferociously to be free of government regulation. Had they not succeeded, they
could not have done what they did next: They created and leveraged trillions of
dollars of complex "derivatives" - mortgage-backed securities,
collateralized debt obligations and credit default swaps - all riding on an
unprecedented real estate bubble stimulated by their frenzy of creative
finance. When the bubble burst, as bubbles do, many of these financial titans
faced bankruptcy, their obligations far exceeding their assets.
The $700 billion of taxpayers'
money, in the plan suggested by Paulson, will buy enough of the toxic
obligations to allow the companies to avoid bankruptcy. Not coincidentally, a
major beneficiary of the scheme will be the investment bank Goldman Sachs.
Paulson resigned as CEO of Goldman Sachs to become the Treasury secretary in
2006, having amassed a personal net worth of $700 million during his 32-year
tenure at the bank (on average, $21.9 million per year).
We need to "remove the
distressed assets from the financial system," Paulson suggests. Relieved
of the burden, the great Wall Street banks can then regain, presumably, its
folksy function: assuring that "money and capital flow to and from
households and businesses to pay for home loans, school loans and investments
that create jobs."
For the good of the American
economy, Paulson is correct that credit needs to flow and the distressed assets
need to be removed. He is not correct that credit needs to flow from Goldman
Sachs and other Wall Street financial houses. And the distressed assets do not
have to be assumed by the taxpayers.
There are other, far more equitable
and justified ways to accomplish both.
The distressed assets - that is, the
losses - can and should be absorbed by the executives, directors and
stockholders of the corporate banks and other institutions that propagated the
financial firestorm. They can and should, as the dictates of the free market
insist, stand accountable for their actions and accept bankruptcy. It is not
the responsibility of the American taxpayers to shield them.
Paulson wants to rescue Wall Street
so Wall Street, he assures us, can get back to lending. That is certain to save
Paulson's former firm and the others, but it is by no means certain that credit
will then flow to "home loans, school loans and investments that create
jobs." The Wall Street firms are far more likely to revive their lucrative
trade in complex and esoteric financial "products."
Seven hundred billion dollars is a
lot of money. It is more than we've spent so far on the administration's
fraudulent "war on terror" (See "The Mega-Lie Called the 'War on
Terror': A Masterpiece of Propaganda".) Is it not better public policy to
channel the money to "households and businesses" in some other, more
direct, more effective and far more reliable way?
There are hundreds, if not
thousands, of
The crisis is real, but there are
ways to serve the nation's interests at large and even to earn a modest return
on its assets. We do not need to subsidize the failure of Wall Street and hope
thereafter for better days.
The welfare of the Wall Street
financiers should not be the focus of public policy, and this clever attempt by
the Bush administration is a perversion of decent governance.
We should not be stampeded into the
greatest corporate theft of public assets, arguably, in the nation's history.
Instead, to paraphrase one of our presidential campaigns, we need to put our
country first and stop Paulson dead in his tracks.
Richard
W. Behan lives and writes on