Hang On to Your Wallet! The Government is About to Rescue Us
by Dave Lindorff
When the financial markets started coming undone earlier this week,
the Treasury Secretary and the Federal Reserve stepped in, and with $85
billion of our money (actually our children's money,
since they borrowed it from China and Saudi Arabia), bought foundering
AIG, the world's largest insurance company, and assumed its colossal
pile of crap debt.
That didn't help, and the stock market crashed further, falling to
levels not seen in three years. Banks, meanwhile, stopped lending,
figuring to just hold onto their money and try to weather the crash.
The US Treasury and the Fed stepped in again, this time pumping nearly
$300 billion more of our money into foreign money markets, and getting
European and other governments to do the same in an effort to get the
credit markets open again and to stop the stock market swoon. That was
on top of some $700 billion already spent on bailouts.
It didn't work. Thursday, the markets continued to fall, well into
the afternoon, and it looked like another seriously down day. But then
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson came up with a new idea. He said he
and the Bush administration were considering setting up a new agency to
assume all the bad debt of the banking sector--meaning all those bad
loans they made, and that they lured unsuspecting consumers into taking
out, by way of deceptive marketing techniques and outright fraud.
Note that we're talking about perhaps half a trillion dollars
here--of our money again. And remember, much or even most of this money
will never get repaid, and we're talking about money that could have
funded reduced class sizes in every school in America, a national
healthcare system, a crash R&D program into non-carbon energy and (not or) a strengthened Social Security and Medicare program.
The drones in the Democratic Party leadership in Congress
immediately jumped on the bandwagon, with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
(D-CA) urging her charges to act quickly to get some kind of a bill out
there to facilitate the bail-out, which could cost anywhere from $600
billion to $1 trillion, but most estimates.
The thing to remember here is that this is not a rescue of the
little guy (though the Democrats say their rescue plan, when it
appears, will include some kind of relief for people unable to pay
their mortgages). Don't hold your breath. Odds are those people facing
foreclosure will still be unable to pay their mortgages, and besides,
there's no way there will be relief for the majority of homeowners who aren't missing their mortgage payments, but who are struggling mightily to meet them each month.
Primarily, who gets helped by this enforced taxpayer largesse are
the fat cats who own all the stock in these financial institutions, all
the executives who pay themselves outsize salaries each year for their
lousy management records, all these hotshot traders who make the deals
that later turn sour, long after they've run off to another job taking
their bonuses with them.
We ordinary people, who live from check to check, will feel the
pain of this "rescue" in the form of higher taxes in coming years, and
in a devalued dollar--because you can bet that all that money they're
printing, and all that added debt they're piling on to the mountain of
debt already out there is going to make the rest of the world pretty
queasy about holding onto dollar-denominated debt, or about buying any
more of it.
When you hear a banker say he's going to help you, it pays to hang
onto your wallet. When you hear a politician say he's going to help
you, hang onto your wallet. If they're both saying the same thing, and
especially if one of them is the head of the Federal Reserve Bank, then
you better really hang on tight.
Not that that will do any good.
The real answer to this crisis is, firstly, a massive dose of
trust-busting, so that no bank or investment bank or insurance company
is so big that its failure becomes a threat to the financial system,
and thus the government has to rescue it with taxpayer money, and
secondly, a return to the era of Glass-Steagall, when it was illegal
for banks to also be in the investment banking busiiness.
All the talk of "efficiencies" and of "better service to the
customer" that has been endlessly parroted to justify mergers like
Citicorp and Travelers, or JP Morgan and Chase Bank, or now Bank of
America and Merrill Lynch is fraudulent. Just to give an example, my
bank, once known as Willow Grove Bank, a small family-owned
institution, was bought by another bank and became Willow Financial.
Almost immediately the staffing levels went down. Recently, the
combined entity, which ran into trouble, was bought by another
institution, Harleyville Bank. Now there are half as many tellers most
of the time. As one teller confided, "Every time we get bought, they
lay people off."
Of course they do. That's what mergers always do. To recoup the
costs of the merger, management cuts back on service and employment.
The truth is, for all the talk about the efficiencies of bigness,
getting a mortgage today isn't any cheaper than it was in the 1950s,
when there wasn't even any such thing as a national bank that would be
"too big to fail."
The real reason we have mega financial institutions is that mega
financial institutions pay mega bucks to managers and make mega
donations to the campaign coffers of politicians. They also get to put
some of those mega-buck managers into key advisory positions in each
administration, Republican and Democrat, to ensure that government
polices allow them to get even bigger and even richer--and to ensure
that when they screw it up, they get rescued at the taxpayers' expense.
__________________
DAVE LINDORFF is a Philadelphia-based journalist and columnist.
His latest book is "The Case for Impeachment" (St. Martin's Press, 2006
and now available in paperback edition). His work is available at www.thiscantbehappening.net
- dlindorff's blog
- Login or register to post comments
Printer-friendly version- Send to friend


Very sad
The public has bought the lie also that we can't let these financial instituions fail because it will hurt the little guy.
Now you know why I'm a member of the green party. Though i still plan on voting for Barack Obama. There are so many lies and mistruths out there alot of people don't have the sense to tell the lies from the truth.
Pretty soon corporate America will be the government if it isn't already.
Thanks for bringing up the trust-busting. No one mentions that on the news, not even pbs.
Bailout! Again and again for Wall Street!
We see the Government crying about having to bail out the loan Companies they stopped regulating, so that Wall Street could steal from the poor. With no laws to govern bad loans and the rich got richer, now we the people have to bail out the “loan sharks” so that the rich can walk away with their billions and laughing at the people and the Government they’ve swindle!
If we have money in a bank and its insured and the Government is broke, is the bank going to write IOU’s? Your money is insured, but you will not get it when you need it for maybe ten years or so! Back in the Great Depression this little trick was pulled before the bankers started to just walk away with the money.
When we see massive unemployment, which is going to start very soon now, it will be too late for our Government to do anything. When Fannie and Freddie got bailed out we should have opened up our eyes because it was right in front of us the Depression had started and we had too much trust in our government. We also have seen our representatives changing laws for their own benefit, knowing it was wrong by selling their votes for their own riches to lobbyists. This sewage in Washington is backing-up into our private sector of our lives. The only way out of this mess will be to devalue the Dollar, again we see this happening with over priced Gas, groceries, medicine and etc. this is taking place because of no regulations. If the Government is going to devalue the Dollar for this massive bailout with no regulations, this will be the biggest firestorm we will ever see, it will make the Great Depression look like a walk in the park compared to this Depression!
Our representative have sweet-talked us to death and are about ready shovel the dirt over us, we have to start thinking about the United States of America and not the political Parties. If this Bailout is without regulations it won’t be worth the paper its wrote on!
Wakeup Americans this is our Country not the Political Parties Country!