Paulson’s Fixit Plan for the Financial Markets: Less Regulation, More Power to the Fed
by Mike Whitney
It is being billed as a “massive shakeup of US financial market regulation,†but don’t be deceived. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson’s proposals for broad market reform are neither “timely†nor “thoughtfulâ€. (Reuters)
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson
In fact, it’s all just more of the same free market “we can police ourselves†mumbo jumbo that got us into this mess in the first place. The real objective of Paulson’s so-called reforms is to decapitate the SEC and increase the powers of the Federal Reserve.
Same wine, different bottle. Paulson’s real motive is to preempt
the regulatory sledgehammer that is set to descend on the financial
industry following the 2008 election. There’s growing fear that
President Obama will take his fire hose down to Wall Street and flush
out some of the cobwebs that have collected in the market’s dark
corners.
If Paulson’s plan is approved in its present form,
Congress will have even less control over the financial system than it
does now, and the same group of self-serving banking mandarins who
created the biggest equity bubble in history will be able to administer
the markets however they choose, without the annoyance of government
supervision. That’s exactly what Treasury Secretary and his pals at the
Fed want: unlimited power with no accountability.
Paulson is
expected to lay out guidelines and principles that are intended to help
regulators supervise the financial markets. According to AFP:
- “The
President’s Working Group on Financial Markets said the current
regulatory structure is working well despite calls by some US
lawmakers.â€
In other words, the failing banking system, the
housing meltdown, and the frozen corporate bond market are all signs of
a robust financial system? This may be the most ludicrous statement
since “Mission accomplished.â€
The system is imploding and real people
are being hurt by the fallout. Thirty years of industry-led lobbying
has dismantled the regulatory regime which made US financial markets
the envy of the world. The credibility and transparency are gone along
with the Depression era legislation like Glass-Steagall and government
oversight of over-the-counter derivatives instruments. Now the system
is prey to all types of dodgy debt instruments, suspicious “dark poolâ€
trading and off-balance sheets operations that reinforce the belief
that cautious investment is no better than casino gambling.
- “The
regulatory line of sight today is by the counterparties,†the official
said, adding that the guidelines should be “beneficial to industry.â€
(AFP)
How is that different than saying, “Caveat emptor� That’s
not a motto that inspires confidence. Many people still naively believe
that planning their retirement should not have to be a Darwinian tussle
with a crafty junk bond salesman.
Under Paulson’s plan, the
Federal Reserve will be granted new regulatory powers, but whatever
for? The Fed doesn’t use the powers it has now. No one stopped the Fed
from intervening in the mortgage lending fiasco, or the ratings agency
abuses or the off-balance sheets shenanigans. They had the authority
and they should have used it.
The Fed knew everything that was going on
— including the mushrooming sales of derivatives contracts which soared
from under $1 trillion in 2000 to over $500 trillion in 2006 — but they
decided to cheerlead from the sidelines rather than do their jobs. The
fact is, they were worried that if they got involved they might upset
the gravy train of obscene profits that was enriching their bankster
friends.
Former Fed chief Greenspan used to croon like a smitten
teenager every time he was asked about subprime loans or adjustable
rate mortgages. And, as New York Times columnist Floyd Norris points
out, Greenspan “praised the growth in the derivatives market as a boon
for market stability, and resisted calls to use the Fed’s power to
increase regulation.â€
Of course, he did. It was all part of Maestro’s
“New Economyâ€: trickle-down Elysium, where the endless flow of low
interest credit merged with financial innovation to create a
Reaganesque El Dorado. There are no regulations in Eden; anything goes
and to heck with the public, they can fend for themselves.
Now
it’s Paulson’s job to keep the neoliberal flame lit long enough to make
sure that government busybodies and bureaucratic do-gooders don’t upset
the applecart. That means concocting a wacky public relations campaign
to convince the public that Wall Street is not just a pirate’s cove of
land sharks and bunko artists, but a trusted ally in maintaining a
strong economy through vital and efficient markets.
The Times‘ Norris summed up Paulson’s sham reforms like this:
- "The
plan has its genesis in a yearlong effort to limiting Washington’s role
in the market. And that DNA is unmistakably evident in the fine print.
Although the proposal would impose the first regulation of hedge funds
and private equity funds, that oversight would have a light touch,
enabling the government to do little beyond collecting information —
except in times of crisis. The regulatory umbrella created in the 1930s
would grow wider, with power concentrated in fewer agencies. But that
authority would be limited, doing virtually nothing to regulate the
many new financial products whose unwise use has been a culprit in the
current financial crisis."1
What nonsense. The house is on fire
and hyperventilating Hank is still wasting our time with this rubbish.
The real problem is that Paulson and his buddies at the Federal Reserve
think of the financial system as their personal fiefdom so they refuse
to loosen their hoary grip even though the economy is listing starboard
and the water is flooding into the lower decks.
Once again, the New York Times:
- "All
the checks and balances in the plan reflect the mindset of its
architect, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, who came to Washington
after a long career on Wall Street. He has worried that any effort to
substantially tighten regulation could hamper the ability of American
markets to compete with foreign rivals."
No one elected Paulson
to do anything. He has no mandate. He is an industry rep who has worked
exclusively for a small group of wealthy investors who have put the
entire country at risk with their toxic mortgage-backed bonds, their
reckless Ponzi-type speculation, and their off-book chicanery.
Paulson
should be removed immediately and returned to his wolf’s lair at G-Sax.
If Bush is serious about straightening out Wall Street, then bring in
Eliot Spitzer. He’s available. And he’ll do what it takes to clean
house, that is, put a truncheon-wielding robo-cop in every trading-pit
at the NYSE, and dispatch government accountants to every office of
every CFO making sure they have a Big Red Pen in one hand and a taser
in the other. That’s the only way to get the attention of the bandit
class.
- “I do not believe it is fair or accurate to blame our regulatory structure for the current turmoil,†says Paulson.
Paulson
is wrong. The current turmoil is all about the lack of regulation and
he’d better prepare himself for some big changes. The pendulum is
already in motion and tighter regulations will soon follow. There needs
to be an accounting process for all transactions and capital
requirements for every financial institution that creates credit. No
exceptions. All of these businesses pose a real danger to the overall
system and, therefore, must conform to clearly articulated and strictly
enforced rules; no off-balance sheets operations, no dark pool trading,
no unregulated derivatives contracts, no level-3 assets, no “mark to
model†garbage bonds where CFOs unilaterally decide what they are worth
by picking a number out of a hat.
It’s time to restore order to
the markets so retirees and working class families can feel safe
investing in their futures. They are the ones who are most hurt by Wall
Street’s trickery.
Paulson’s plan is a non starter. The era of sandbagging, supply-side banditry is over. Good riddance.
1 “In Treasury Plan, a Reluctant Eye over Wall Streetâ€, Floyd Norris, New York Times
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