All over Europe and in much of the rest of the world, a new fictional
hero has engaged the fascination of millions of readers. His name is
Mikael Blomkvist, and he’s the protagonist of the late Stieg Larsson’s
Millennium trilogy.
These
thrillers, set against the background of high financial crimes and
misdemeanors, have become global best-sellers, doubtless in part owing
to their gripping plots, elaborate mysteries and engaging characters.
But their success is also indisputably a by-product of the macroeconomic
chicaneries of our era and the human catastrophes they have wrought.
Larsson
understood that financial crimes are far from victimless. They have
upended millions of people’s lives, even if most of the victims don’t
understand how they’ve been shortchanged and who is responsible.
Although the
financial crisis that swept the world may have started on Wall Street,
it has brought down governments and shredded economic security
worldwide, resulting in the loss of millions of jobs and homes as
businesses collapse, foreclosures grow, credit tightens and communities
are devastated.
Estimates of the damage run into the trillions.
The Pew Economic
Policy Group reports the average U.S. household lost $66,000 in stock
holdings and $30,000 in real estate values from June 2008 through March
2009 due to the upheaval in world markets. This brings us close to
$100,000 per family.
Against that
backdrop, it’s not hard to see the appeal of Larsson’s hero Blomkvist,
whose “contempt for his fellow financial journalists” the author
encapsulates with stinging clarity:
“A bank director
who blows millions on foolhardy speculations should not keep his job. A
managing director who plays shell company games should do time…. The job
of the financial journalist was to examine the sharks who created
interest crises and speculated away the savings of small investors, to
scrutinize company boards with the same merciless zeal with which
political reporters pursue the tiniest steps out of line of ministers
and members of Parliament.”
This is why I
identified with Blomkvists’s fictional mission; in some ways it captured
my own frustrations in a media world for which “the c-word” — as in
financial crime— seems must never be spoken.
The media failed us on the most crucial story of our era.
Our newspapers
and TV sources contributed to an economic disaster so cynically
engineered even billionaire investor Jim Chanos was prompted to ask, “So
where are the perp walks? How long does it take before we see any
investigations? It boggles the mind that $150 billion is vaporized…there
haven’t been any arrests, any indictments, nor any convictions at any
major bank or at any of the government-owned financial institutions
Fannie, Freddie and AIG.”
I know how hard
it is to alarm the public with mere facts. They don’t have the context
within which to interpret complicated stories. In 2006, I released the
film ”In Debt We Trust,” exposing illegal subprime scams and warning of
the coming meltdown. It was well reviewed, but no mainstream TV outlet
would air it.
I was dismissed
as an alarmist and a “doom and gloomer.” A mass denial of the dangers
ahead seemed to be embedded in the euphoria of the very bubble that was
bringing in billions for Wall Street’s financial alchemists, who
themselves seemed oblivious to the risks and indifferent to the social
impact their practices courted.
The media
coverage has made a complex reality deliberately complicated, even
incomprehensible. The satirical paper The Onion put the financial press
in its place regarding the totally obtuse reporting for which financial
journalists were justly infamous even before the biggest scoop since
1929 fell into their laps: “JPMORGAN CHASE ACQUIRES BEAR STEARNS IN
TEDIOUS-TO-READ NEWS ARTICLE.”
The Onion
witheringly characterized the coverage as “bogging down the news for
anyone who might be remotely interested in grasping what the fuck is
going on.”
Yet there were
truth-tellers out there who were largely ignored. Investors like Warren
Buffett compared the new exotic financial instruments to weapons of mass
destruction — financial nuclear bombs.
Even guru of the
right Ayn Rand had warned in Atlas Shrugged about greed destroying her
beloved free market: “When you see that men get richer by graft and by
pull than by work, and your laws don’t protect you against them, but
protect them against you — when you see corruption being rewarded and
honesty becoming a self-sacrifice — you may know that your society is
doomed.”
Doomed or not, in
the second year of the Age of Obama the hoped-for economic turnaround
has yet to occur. Even as the stock market goes up again, benefitting
institutional investors with the capabilities to exploit it,
unemployment remains high and loan defaults continue to rise.
The best projections forecast a “jobless recovery,” which for millions is no recovery at all. How did we get into this mess?
Put ten
economists in a room, and you get 20 explanations. Most of them revolve
around business mistakes, poor risk models or even psychological
problems like delusion and market madness. Few will concede that Sen.
Ted Kaufman, D-Delaware, is right in charging that “fraud and potential
criminal conduct were at the heart of the financial crisis.”
Missing has been a hard-nosed look at the crisis as a crime story.
Former bank
examiner William Black understands this. Focusing on looting and CEO
fraud, he helped send over 1,000 bankers to prison during the S&L
crisis in the 1980s. This time there were neither dogged sleuths nor
crime-busting newshounds on the beat.
Even Alan
Greenspan has finally admitted in his all-too-polite exchange with a
government inquiry that has come to resemble a Princeton seminar, “If
you don’t have enforcement, and a lot of that stuff was just plain
fraud, you’re not coming to grips with the issue.”
Of course, this “maestro” didn’t go into detail on “a lot of that stuff.”
What we are watching is an abstruse debate about banks that are “too big to fail,” not too big to jail.
Very little of
the disco
urse speaks in terms of the victims — the millions of families
now without breadwinners or homes. Most of the commentary still looks up
at CEOs, not down at the people whom they robbed by design, as folk
singer Woody Guthrie put it, not with a six-gun but “with a fountain
pen.”
When most of us
think of crime, we think of gangsters with guns, not banksters with
elaborate schemes designed to transfer your wealth to their accounts.
Graydon Carter,
the editor of Vanity Fair — a publication more at home with Groucho Marx
than Karl — said of the meltdown: “[This] may well turn out to be the
greatest nonviolent crime against humanity in history…never before have
so few done so much to so many.”
Yet economists,
even progressive ones like James Kwak, deeply mired in the labyrinthian
world of financial transactions, still don’t believe it.
The day the SEC filed a complaint against Goldman Sachs, he wrote onBaselineScenario.com,
one of the more critical Web sites covering the collapse of this vast
swindle: “One of the things I say now and then that most annoys people
is that the financial crisis was not caused by criminal behavior….
“My general line
is that I’m sure there was some bad behavior that rose to the level of
criminal liability — like lying in disclosure documents — but that it
wasn’t necessary for the crisis, and we could have had the crisis
without any criminal activity at all.”
The problem with
this thinking is that it defines financial crime too narrowly, only in
terms of securities laws concerned primarily with protecting investors.
It doesn’t
acknowledge that financial institutions spent nearly a billion dollars
underwriting efforts to erode government controls and change rules,
regulations and even laws to allow them to get away with whatever
enhanced their bottom lines, no matter who got hurt.
Their
well-documented history of aggressive lobbying and buying up politicians
qualifies them as avaricious manipulators, not law-abiding companies.
Their legal and moral defenses for this conduct are entirely bogus.
Let’s look at
Goldman Sachs. In my film I report that Goldman was accused by
Massachusetts authorities of deliberately designing mortgages to fail.
They settled the complaint by paying a $60 million fine and wrote it off
as a cost of doing business.
The SEC later
filed civil fraud charges on similar grounds. This was followed by
turbulent hearings on the Hill during which Sen. Carl Levin, D-Michigan,
repeatedly cited an internal correspondence reference to “shitty” deals
that Goldman Sachs peddled only to bet against them.
The Justice
Department, in a separate action, was asked to open a criminal file.
Among the allegations: shady accounting schemes. The giant firm has
certainly come in for excoriation and ridicule, but none of Goldman’s
officers has been convicted of wrongdoing, and they are “lawyered up” to
the gills.
Leslie Griffith
on Reader Supported News writes: “A modern-day financial monarchy,
Goldman acts with the impunity once reserved for kings. Controlling
legislators. Electing Presidents. Filling the Executive Branch with
well-heeled lackeys, manipulating world markets and betting against the
welfare of its own clients…the American people. When their equivalent of
‘tax time’ came, they squeezed the peasants for billions of bail-out
bucks.”
In their
testimony before Congress, Goldman bankers defended themselves by saying
all big banks did what they did. A weak alibi at best, it nonetheless
seems to be working for them.
The assignment of
criminal liability is hardly underway. As one lawyer said to Bloomberg
News, “In order to proceed criminally in a case, you need to have very
clear evidence of lying, cheating and stealing.”
In plain English: Don’t get your hopes up.
The government
has not declared war on Wall Street even after Wall Street declared war
on Main Street. The housing bubble was built on a bedrock of fraud
linking shady subprime brokers and appraisers to an industry of
financial products that were then resold with misrepresented values
thanks to the connivance of unethical ratings agencies.
The selling and
reselling of assetless asset-backed securities is a central element of
the vast fraud, as is the practice of insuring while simultaneously
betting against these investments through companies like AIG.
We are talking
about a criminal enterprise involving tens of thousands of people
working in the financial services industry. Martin Wolf of The Financial
Times explained that three industries worked together almost like a
cabal to perpetuate these schemes.
The architects of
the FIRE economy (structured around Finance, Insurance and Real
Estate), operated in the shadow of bent rules and apathetic regulators.
They built a huge infrastructure of collaborators and henchmen called
“financial service professionals.”
Writes Wolf: “In
between the ultimate borrowers and the risk-takers were
loan-originators, designers and packagers of securitized assets, ratings
agencies, sales staff, managers of banks and SIVs [Structured
Investment Vehicles] and managers of pension — and other — funds.”
What chance did
some poor homeowner or credit card customer have against this savvy and
well-funded phalanx of operatives whose one mission was to separate them
from their property and money?
Many knew the
people they were selling to could not afford to buy their products. They
didn’t care. It was all done deceptively and by design. It was
deliberate, engineered in public and hidden in plain sight.
At the local
level, mortgage companies said they were under pressure from Wall Street
to keep selling homes to the poor so the paper could be resold in an
atmosphere of trickle-down corruption.
My own investigation led me to produce a new film, “Plunder: The Crime of Our Time,” out on DVD from Disinfo. (PlunderTheCrimeOfOurTime.com)
.
I also wrote a companion book, The Crime of Our Time (Disinformation
Books) with more documentation than you can get into any film of
reasonable length.
I was surprised
when the Wall Street Journal characterized it as an “anti-Wall Street
film [that] isn’t just for Michael Moore fans.” The Hollywood Interview
blog called it “fascinating and nailbiting, much like All the
President’s Men.”
Movie City News
elaborated: “Plunder: The Crime of Our Time describes how Wall Street
interests greased the skids for just such a collapse, consciously
breaking laws they knew government regulators were unlikely to defend.
Michael Moore has trod similar ground, but in a more overtly
entertaining style…. It’s a sobering documentary, but one that’s too
important to ignore…in Schechter’s case, again.”
This crisis can
be explained in a way most people will understand, and when the public
“gets it” they will get angry and act. It’s the oldest truism: Where
there is a will, there’s a way.
Danny Schechter writes the News Dissector blog for MediaChannel.org