Rescue for
the Few,
Debt Slavery
for the Many
By MICHAEL
HUDSON
13/10/08
"Counterpunch"
- - We are
now entering
the
financial
End Time.
Bailout
“Plan A”
(buy the
junk
mortgages)
has failed,
“Plan B”
(buy ersatz
stocks in
the banks to
recapitalize
them without
wiping out
current mismanagers)
is fizzling,
and the
debts still
can’t be
paid. That
is the
reality Wall
Street
avoids
confronting.
“First they
ignore you,
then they
denounce
you, and
then they
say that
they knew
what you
were saying
all the
time,” said
Gandhi. The
same might
be said of
today’s
overhang of
debts in
excess of
the
economy’s
ability to
pay. First
the policy
makers
pretend that
they can be
paid, then
they
denounce the
pessimists
as spreading
panic, and
then they
say that of
course
students
have been
taught for
four
thousand
years now
how the
“magic of
compound
interest”
keeps on
doubling and
redoubling
debts faster
than the
economy can
squeeze out
an economic
surplus to
pay.
What has
ended is the
idea that
“the magic
of compound
interest”
can make
economies
rich without
having to
work and
without
industry. I
hope we have
seen the end
of
derivatives
formulae
seeking to
make money
by playing
in a
zero-sum
game. A debt
overhang
always ends
either in
foreclosure
of the
debtor’s
property, or
in a debt
annulment to
preserve the
economy’s
overall
freedom and
equity.
This means
that the
postmodern
economy as
we know it
must end –
either in
financial
polarization
and debt
peonage to a
new
oligarchic
elite, or in
a debt
cancellation,
a Jubilee
Year to
rescue
society. But
when the
government
says that it
is reviewing
“all” the
options,
this reality
is not one
of them.
Treasury
Secretary
Henry
Paulson’s
first option
was to buy
packages of
junk
mortgages
(collateralized
debt
obligations,
CDOs) to
save the
wealthiest
institutional
investors
from having
to take a
loss on
their bad
bets. When
this was not
enough, he
came up with
“Plan B,” to
give money
to banks.
But whereas
Britain and
European
countries
talked of
nationalizing
banks or at
least taking
a
controlling
interest,
Mr. Paulson
gave in to
his Wall
Street
cronies and
promised
that the
government’s
stock
purchases
would not be
real. There
would be no
dilution of
existing
shareholders,
and the
government’s
investment
would be
non-voting.
To cap the
giveaway to
his cronies,
Mr. Paulson
even agreed
not to ask
executives
to give up
their golden
parachutes,
exorbitant
annual
bonuses or
salaries.
Plan A (the
$700 billion
to buy
mortgage-backed
junk that
the private
sector will
not buy)
failed
partly
because it
let
financial
institutions
avoid
putting a
fair value
on the debt
packages
they were
selling.
Instead of
telling the
truth about
their
financial
position by
marking
assets to
market
prices),
they can
“mark to
model,”
Enron-style.
We have seen
the result:
A solid week
of plunging
stock market
prices. The
public media
call this a
panic, but
there is
nothing
irrational
about it.
Who in their
right mind
would buy
securities
or buy into
a bank
without
knowing what
the
securities
were worth?
Faith in
junk
mathematical
models has
ended.
So we still
await a
public
response to
the problem
of how to
write down
debts. Whose
economic
interest
will have to
give: that
of debtors,
as
increasingly
has been the
case over
the past
eight
centuries;
or that of
creditors,
which have
fought back
to create a
neoliberal
economy
controlled
by the FIRE
sector?
It is not
too late to
decide which
road to
take, but
Wall Street
bankers and
creditors
have taken
the lead in
positioning
themselves.
Seeing which
way the
political
winds were
blowing,
they moved
to empty out
the Treasury
before the
November 3
elections
much like
medieval
citizens
fleeing a
horde of
Mongolian
raiders
under
Genghis
Khan. “We’re
moving.
Clean out
the
cupboards,”
much as
Lehman
Brothers
emptied out
their
foreign bank
accounts in
Britain and
elsewhere
just before
declaring
bankruptcy,
taking what
they could
and steering
it to their
best
friends.
The pretense
was that a
bailout was
needed to
restore
confidence.
But the
ensuing week
showed that
the claims
were false.
It didn’t
turn the
stock market
around as
promised.
The Dow
Jones
Industrial
Average fell
2,200 points
from
Wednesday,
October 1
through the
following
Friday
October 10 –
eight
straight
trading
days, not
even pausing
for the
usual
zigzags.
Friday’s
plunge was
100 points a
minute for
the first
seven
minutes – a
690 point
drop to
under 8000.
Each 100
points was
more than a
1 percent
drop, which
was
reflected on
the NASDAQ.
Nothing
could
withstand
the pressure
of so many
Americans
cashing in
their mutual
funds
overnight
and so many
foreigners
in earlier
time zones
putting in
sell-at-market
orders.
Short
sellers made
one of the
largest and
quickest
fortunes
ever, and
then covered
their
positions by
buying back
the stocks
they had
pre-sold.
This pushed
prices up
even into
positive
territory
just before
10:30 AM
when George
Bush began
to speak.
Half the
financial
stocks
showed gains
– a sign
that the
Plunge
Protection
Team had
jumped in.
But Mr. Bush
said nothing
helpful and
stocks went
back into
freefall,
ending down
another 128
points
despite the
upcoming
weekend G7
meeting.
There was no
talk at all
of reducing
debt levels
– only of
giving more
money to
banks,
insurance
companies
and other
money
managers, as
if “pushing
on a string”
somehow
would lead
them to lend
yet more to
an already
debt-ridden
economy.
If Congress
really
wanted to
restore
confidence,
here’s what
it might
have done:
First, mark
to market,
not to
model.
Investors no
longer
believe
America’s
Enron-style
accounting,
debt rating
agencies or
monoline
risk
insurers.
They don’t
trust U.S.
banks to be
honest about
their
financial
positions.
They worry
about the
fraud
charges
brought by
attorneys
general in
eleven
states
against
predatory
lenders such
as
Countrywide
and Wachovia
that
Citibank,
JPMorgan
Chase and
Bank of
America were
so eager to
buy.
So is it too
late for
Congress to
change its
mind and
repeal the
giveaway? If
the $700
billion
handout
didn’t
stabilize
the
unsalvageable
for small
investors,
pension
funds and
even the
financial
sector
itself, what
did it do?
What the Fed
has been
doing while
the media
have not
been
looking?
Let’s put
the giveaway
in
perspective.
While
Senators and
Congressmen
subject to
voters’
choice were
debating
$700 billion
for the
major Wall
Street
contributors
to both
parties
(admittedly
only for
starters,
Mr. Paulson
explained),
the Federal
Reserve
already had
given even
more,
without any
public
discussion
and without
the major
media
noticing.
Since Bear
Stearns
failed in
March, the
Federal
Reserve has
used the
small print
of its
charter to
go outside
its normal
customers
(which are
supposed to
be
commercial
banks), to
give
investment
banks,
brokerage
houses and
now large
corporations
almost
indiscriminately
some $875
billion in
“cash for
trash”
swaps. (The
statistics
are released
each week in
the Fed’s
H41 report.)
Like Aladdin
offering new
lamps for
old, the Fed
has
exchanged
Treasury
securities
for junk
mortgages
and other
securities
that
brokerage
houses and
investment
banks did
not have
time to pawn
off onto
OPEC, Asian
sovereign
wealth funds
or other
investors.
The press
lauds Mr.
Bernanke as
“a student
of the Great
Depression.”
If he were,
he should
know that
what led to
the 1929
collapse
were harsh
U.S.
Government
creditor
policies
toward its
World War I
Allied
governments.
This created
a situation
where the
Federal
Reserve had
to provide
easy credit
to hold
interest
rates
artificially
low so as to
encourage
U.S.
investors to
lend to
Britain and
Germany,
which would
use these
dollar
inflows to
pay their
Inter-Ally
arms and
reparations
debts. Mr.
Bernanke’s
predecessor,
Alan
Greenspan,
promoted
easy credit
simply for
ideological
reasons, to
enrich Wall
Street by
enabling it
to sell more
debt.
A student of
the Great
Depression
would
understand
the
conflicts of
interest
between
retail
commercial
banking and
wholesale
investment
banking and
money
management
that led
Congress to
pass the
Glass-Steagall
Act in 1933
– conflicts
unleashed
once again
when Pres.
Clinton
backed
then-Fed
Chairman
Alan
Greenspan
and
Republican
leader (and
McCain hero)
Senator Phil
Gramm in
leading the
repeal of
this act,
opening up
the
floodgates
to today’s
financial
double-dealing
that has
cost the
American
economy so
much.
If Mr.
Bernanke
does know
this
history, his
behavior is
simply that
of an
opportunistic
student of
the art of
political
self-advancement,
toadying to
Wall Street
in
campaigning
for one last
great
rip-off
before the
Bush
Administration
goes out of
business.
The Fed has
given Wall
Street newly
minted
Treasury
bonds, added
to the
national
debt out of
thin air. It
has done
this without
feeling any
need to
rationalize
it by
drawing
absurd
public-relations
pictures
about how
the
government
may “make a
profit for
taxpayers.”
The Fed
Chairman is
not elected
democratically.
He
traditionally
is
designated
by the Wall
Street
financial
sector that
the Fed is
supposed to
regulate,
acting as
its lobbyist
for creditor
interests –
the top 10
percent of
the
population –
against that
of the
indebted
“bottom 90
percent.”
This
“independence
of the
central
bank” is
trumpeted as
a hallmark
of
democracy.
But it is
undemocratic,
precisely by
being
isolated
from public
control.
The Age of
Oligarchy
Treasury
Secretary
Paulson has
no such
luxury. The
Treasury is
supposed to
represent
the national
interest,
not that of
bankers –
even though
its head
these days
is drawn
from Wall
Street and
acts as its
lobbyist.
Mr. Paulson
presented
his almost
totalitarian
giveaway
gruffly to
Congress on
a
take-it-or-leave
it basis,
announcing
that if
Congress did
not save
Wall Street
from taking
losses on
its mountain
of bad
loans, the
banks were
willing to
crash the
economy out
of spite.
“Please
don’t make
us wreck the
economy,” he
said in
effect. As
Margaret
Thatcher
used to say
while
selling off
the British
government’s
crown jewels
in the
1980s, TINA:
There is no
alternative.
In making
this bold
threat Mr.
Paulson
behaved as
arrogantly
as Lehman’s
CEO Richard
Fuld did
when he
tried to
bluff Korea
and other
prospective
investors
into paying
the full,
fictitiously
high book
value for
his company.
(His bluff
failed and
Lehman went
bankrupt,
wiping out
its
shareholders,
including
the
employees
and managers
who held 30
percent of
its stock.)
There turned
out to be an
alternative
after all.
Responding
to the
loudest
public
condemnation
in memory,
Congress
called Mr.
Paulson’s
bluff.
What made
his $700
billion
Troubled
Asset Relief
Program
(TARP) so
much more
visible to
the media
than the
Fed’s
actions is
that
Congress is
involved,
and this is
an election
year. The
level of
deception
and false
argument is
therefore
enormous –
along with a
few
tradeoffs
and tax cuts
to distract
attention.
Erstwhile
Republican
opponent
Sen. Jeff
Sessions of
Alabama came
right out
and said
that “This
bill has
been
packaged
with a lot
of very
popular
things to
give it even
more
momentum,”
so that (as
The New York
Times
explained),
“instead of
siding with
a $700
billion
bailout,
lawmakers
could now
say they
voted for
increased
protection
for deposits
at the
neighborhood
bank, income
tax relief
for
middle-class
taxpayers
and aid for
schools in
rural areas
where the
federal
government
owns much of
the land.”
Left behind
while Wall
Street’s
believers in
the rapture
of free
markets were
swept up to
heaven by
“socialism
for the
rich” have
been
mortgage
debtors,
student-loan
debtors, the
Pension
Benefit
Guarantee
Corporation
(PBGC, some
$25 billion
short), the
Federal
Deposit
Insurance
Corporation
(FDIC, about
$40 billion
short), as
well as
Social
Security
which, we
are warned,
may run up a
trillion
dollar
deficit
thirty or
forty years
down the
line. Only
the
wealthiest
have been
beneficiaries,
not voters,
homeowners
and other
debtors.
Still,
Congress was
panicked
into acting
on Friday,
October 3,
because a
week
earlier,
September
26, stocks
fell 777
points after
Congressmen
responded to
an
unprecedented
volume of
voter
protest
against the
bailout.
“This sucker
could go
down,” Pres.
Bush warned
as Wall
Street’s
lobbyists
blamed the
market
downturn to
the failure
of Congress
to preserve
the
“monetary
system,” and
specifically
the banks
and
insurance
companies
that already
had lost
their net
worth and
were
plunging
deeper into
Negative
Equity
territory.
Democratic
leaders
Barney Frank
and House
Speaker
Nancy Pelosi
said, in
effect,
“Look what
you’ve done!
You
irresponsible
politicians
are
grandstanding
on
principle,
and wiping
out peoples’
stock market
savings and
threatening
their
pension
funds. If
you don’t
give Wall
Street firms
enough money
to cover
their losses
so that
everyone
wins,
they’ll kill
the economy
until they
get their
way.” Well,
they didn’t
quite say
this, but
that was
basically
their
message. It
certainly
was Wall
Street’s
message:
“Wall Street
to Economy:
Your money
or your
life.”
So Congress
gave in.
Democrats
ran like
lemmings to
“save the
economy.”
Yet the
stock market
fell a few
hundred
points, and
kept on
plunging all
week long,
much worse
and much
faster than
had occurred
right after
Congress had
initially
defeated the
bill.
The “Reality
Problem”
What did the
“free
market”
theory
underlying
the giveaway
leave out of
account? For
starters,
“the
monetary
system”
turns out to
be a
euphemism
for the
fortunes of
financial
gamblers
using junk
mathematics
(the Merton-Scholes
derivatives
formula)
based on
junk
economics
(blessed
with Nobel
Prizes) to
buy,
speculate
and even to
insure junk
mortgages,
junk bonds
and junk
commercial
paper and
derivatives
based on
their
relative
prices. So
what is left
out first of
all was full
knowledge of
the value of
what is
being bought
and sold.
Mark-to-market
models leave
the price up
to the
investment
bankers. If
trust
existed and
there really
was honor
among these
thieves, a
government
bailout
would not be
necessary,
because “the
market”
could clear.
“Free
market”
ideology
assumes that
each party
will act in
his or her
self-interest.
If this is
so, why
should
foreign
governments
accumulate
more dollar
claims on
the U.S.
Treasury,
which
already owes
their
central
banks $4
trillion?
When there
hardly were
enough
Treasury
securities
to go around
even as the
United
States ran
unprecedented
federal
budget
deficits,
U.S.
officials
urged these
banks and
sovereign
wealth funds
to buy
packaged
mortgages
yielding a
higher rate
of return.
And at least
by buying
these bonds,
foreign
governments
would not be
accused of
funding
America’s
war in Iraq
that most of
their voters
opposed. But
investors
made a fatal
mistake in
believing
U.S.
representations
of the value
of their
junk-mortgage
packages.
This trust
has now been
lost, all
the more so
since the
bailout’s
permission
to keep on
“marking to
market.”
Congress
thought that
its $700
billion
would
distract
attention at
least until
the November
4 election.
But to no
avail.
Markets fell
157 points
on Giveaway
Friday, and
kept on
going down
another 800
points on
Monday,
October 6
(to about
9500) before
bouncing 500
points off
the floor,
only to fall
even more
through
Friday. So
the giveaway
failed in
its stated
purpose to
rescue stock
market
investors
(“peoples’
capitalism”)
or their
pension
funds. But
that was not
its real
purpose. The
time simply
had come to
clear out
and take
whatever one
could.
Making banks
and insurers
in the
zero-sum
derivative
game whole,
so that
winners can
collect
their bets
while losers
can sell
their bad
investments
to the
Treasury, is
supposed to
re-inflate
the credit
pyramid. The
idea is to
solve the
debt problem
with yet
more debt to
prop up
housing
prices once
again to
unaffordable
levels! This
is not a
long-term
solution,
but it would
give
insiders
enough time
to arrange a
do-over and
get out of
the game
more
quickly, to
sell out
their junk
mortgages
and junk
bonds to the
proverbial
“greater
fool” – in
this case,
the “greater
fool of last
resort,” the
U.S.
Treasury, as
long as it
can be run
by Mr.
Paulson or,
under Mr.
Obama,
perhaps the
former
Goldman-Sachs
official
Robert
Rubin.
The banks
are to
“earn” their
way out of
their
negative
equity
position by
selling more
of their
product –
credit – to
increase the
economy’s
debt levels
and hence
receive more
interest
payments.
The problem
is that most
families are
already
“loaned up.”
They have no
more
discretionary
income to
pledge to
carry more
debt.
Without
writing down
their debts,
there will
be no fresh
lending, and
hence no
source of
credit and
purchasing
power for
new autos,
appliances,
goods and
services in
general.
Debt
deflation is
being
imposed on
the “real”
economy.
Creditors
and
speculators
alone are to
be made
whole.
If no
revenue was
available
for future
Social
Security,
public
health care
and repair
the nation’s
depleted
infrastructure
before this
giveaway,
think of how
bare the
cupboard
must be now
that the
government
has run up
the recent
trillions of
dollars in
new debt
rather than
writing off
a penny of
the bad
mortgage
debts being
blamed for
causing the
debacle.
We can see
where this
is leading.
The
wealthiest 1
percent of
the
population
will come
into
possession
of even more
returns to
wealth than
the 57
percent that
they are now
taking. In
contrast to
the Statue
of Liberty’s
inscription
“give me
your poor …
yearning to
breathe
free,” the
Fed – and
now the
Treasury,
with
Congressional
blessing –
is taking
from the
public purse
and giving
to America’s
wealthiest
investors
and
insiders.
This “Robin
Hood in
Reverse”
program is
being done
without
strings,
without
asking banks
to stop
paying
dividends,
exorbitant
executive
salaries and
golden
parachutes,
and without
taking over
banks with
negative net
worth of the
kind that
many
homeowners
are
experiencing.
Nobody is
talking
about a debt
write-down
or
moratorium.
The subprime
mortgage
problem
could have
been solved
by writing
down just $1
or $2
trillion of
the face
value and
interest
rates of
predatory
loans.
Instead, the
$10+
trillion in
financial-sector
damage in
recent weeks
reflects
Wall
Street’s
fraudulent
packaging
and sale of
junk
mortgages at
unrealistically
high prices,
using junk
mathematics
to calculate
junk
derivatives
and sell
them to
gullible
investors
who believe
that the
pretenses
these
mathematics,
credit
ratings and
projected
income have
a basis in
reality.
The amazing
feature of
today’s
crash is how
many Wall
Street firms
actually
believed
that the
game of
musical
financial
chairs could
go on before
they had to
stop dancing
and indeed,
escape from
the room. I
remember one
day back in
the 1970s
when I
warned Frank
Zarb of
Lazard
Freres about
the
likelihood
of Third
World debt
defaults,
and
suggested
that the
firm should
do an
ability-to-pay
analysis.
“We don’t
have to do
any such
thing,” he
replied. “We
have the
schedule of
what they
owe right
here in this
IMF report.”
It was a
thick
printout of
the
scheduled
debt service
for an
African
country that
soon became
insolvent.
But Wall
Street’s
mentalité
was that of
Herbert
Hoover on
the eve of
the Great
Depression:
A debt is a
debt, and
that is
that. The
response is
to blame the
victim, as
if the
irresponsibility
lies with
debtors
rather than
creditors.
No reversal
of the Bush
tax cuts is
offered to
re-inflate
the economy,
no move
toward more
progressive
taxation of
Wall Street
speculators
who pay only
a 15 percent
“capital
gains” tax
rate instead
of the much
higher
income-tax
and FICA
withholding
rates that
wage-earners
pay. (Wall
Street has
its own
golden
parachute
program, so
why should
it pay for
Social
Security for
the rest of
society?)
There is to
be no
reduction in
the special
tax benefits
for real
estate,
whose tax
favoritism
led to the
crisis by
“freeing”
more income
from the tax
collector to
be pledged
to mortgage
bankers as
interest.
The Bubble
Economy is
to be
re-inflated
by Fannie
Mae, Freddie
Mac and the
FHA lending
to help
buyers bid
up housing
and
commercial
office
prices once
again to a
rate that
promises to
impose debt
peonage on
homeowners.
The budget
deficit will
soar,
without any
prosecution
of tax
evasion
scams by UBS
or KPMG.
Instead of a
fiscal or
regulatory
comet
driving
these
dinosaurs to
extinction,
the climate
has turned
more
conducive to
their
proliferation.
Our Age of
Deception is
to be locked
in even more
tightly. The
Congressional
bailout’s
suspension
of
mark-to-market
rules to
rely on Wall
Street’s
“self-regulation”
should win a
prize for
Oxymoron of
2008 as
investors
have no clue
as to what
financial
assets are
worth. No
wonder
lending has
dried up,
especially
to banks
themselves.
Just as
financial
victims fail
to vote and
support
their
self-interest,
predators
also turn
out to
pursue
self-defeating
“free
market”
strategies.
The
financial
sector’s
short-termism
is the
greatest
enemy to its
survival. It
has
translated
its wealth
into a fatal
political
control of
its legal
climate,
blocking
[with the
explicit
support of
Barack Obama,
Editors]
Congressional
efforts to
rewrite the
oppressive
bankruptcy
laws that
credit-card
banks
lobbied so
hard to
pass, [with
vital help
from Joe
Biden, the
senior
senator from
credit card
company HQ,
the state of
Delaware,
Editors]
crucial.
These hard
bankruptcy
terms
prevent the
courts from
renegotiating
homeowner
debts to
keep
property
occupied,
accelerating
the real
estate price
collapse.
The result
is today’s
negative
equity,
posing the
question of
just who is
to bear the
cost of
bring debts
back in line
with the
economy’s
ability to
pay. Will it
be the
financial
institutions
that
sponsored
asset-price
inflation
and lobbied
for
deregulation
of lenders?
Or, will it
be the
debtors who
thought they
were riding
the wave to
get an
inflationary
free lunch?
Instead of
requiring
creditors to
absorb
losses on
the excess
of debts
over what
can be paid,
the debts
are being
kept in
place, not
scaled back
to what the
economy can
pay. The
government
is to make
creditors
and
computerized
derivatives
speculators
whole – and
will act as
collecting
agent for
the overhead
of bad debts
the economy
has run up.
Today we can
see the
debt-fueled
bubble of
asset-price
inflation
that Alan
Greenspan
trumpeted as
real wealth
creation for
what it
really is –
credit
creation to
bid up real
estate,
stock market
and
packaged-debt
prices.
Tangible
capital
formation
has been
left out of
account, as
if
postindustrial
economies no
longer need
it.
Will voters
see the
asymmetry in
Congress’s
failure to
offer debt
relief for
homeowners
as real
estate
prices
plunge below
the
mortgages
that are
owed? Will
its members
be blamed
for not
rewriting
the nation’s
bankruptcy
laws to free
families
from debt
peonage –
and free
housing
markets from
the price
declines
that result
from today’s
proliferation
of
foreclosure
sales? For
that matter,
will there
be no relief
for
corporations
having to
cut back
investment
in order to
service
their junk
bonds and
other debts
with which
Wall
Street’s
corporate
raiders and
“shareholder
activists”
have loaded
then down?
Evidently
not.
Michael Hudson is a former Wall Street economist specializing in the balance of payments and real estate at the Chase Manhattan Bank (now JPMorgan Chase & Co.), Arthur Anderson, and later at the Hudson Institute (no relation). In 1990 he helped established the world’s first sovereign debt fund for Scudder Stevens & Clark. Dr. Hudson was Dennis Kucinich’s Chief Economic Advisor in the recent Democratic primary presidential campaign, and has advised the U.S., Canadian, Mexican and Latvian governments, as well as the United Nations Institute for Training and Research (UNITAR). A Distinguished Research Professor at University of Missouri, Kansas City (UMKC), he is the author of many books, including Super Imperialism: The Economic Strategy of American Empire (new ed., Pluto Press, 2002) He can be reached via his website, mh@michael-hudson.com