Stopping the Banksters from Killing Financial Reform

This crisis did not happen by accident

By Danny Schechter Created: Aug 18, 2009 Last Updated: Aug 18, 2009
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AIG CEO Edward Liddy testifies before a U.S. Congress committee hearing about why $165 million in retention bonuses paid to AIG executives were necessary, March 18, 2009. (Paul J. Richards/AFP/Getty Images)

NEW YORK—On the issue of bonuses—the one financial matter that seems to bother the public the most—in 2007, banks gave out bonuses worth a staggering $1.6 billion—there is now a debate about allowing bonus guarantees. These were once tied to performance but even that criterion is being watered down.

The New York Times tell us, “A guaranteed bonus might strike many people as a contradiction in terms. But on Wall Street, banks have become so eager to lure and keep top deal makers and traders that they are reviving the practice of offering ironclad, multimillion-dollar payouts—guaranteed, no matter how an employee performs.”

Not a bad job if you can get one—you can get a bonus even if you do lousy. This debate led the newspaper of record to observe. “The resurgence of bonus guarantees underscores just how difficult it is to control Wall Street pay, despite the public outcry over how taxpayer money is being spent.”

But the situation is worse than that, much worse. I had to go to Canada to find a more comprehensive press report on how the fraud factories are winning the battle against new regulation.

David Olive writes in the Toronto Star, “You would think after global financiers triggered the current, unprecedented worldwide recession and credit crisis, they might embrace inevitable reforms that their reckless conduct made necessary. You would be disappointed.”

And that’s an understatement, (or to quote Ellen Brown, “It’s an understatement to call it an understatement,”) Olive tells us that the banks, having bought up much of the Congress, now feel emboldened enough to tell the reformers to shove it:

“For the financiers, to their dishonor, have not so much as tendered an apology for their craven, mass departure from prudence, or what Barney Frank, the Democrat representative for Massachusetts, labels their ‘moral deficiency.’

“Instead, the financiers and their powerful lobby groups are resisting any new legislated constraints on the behavior by which they nearly brought themselves and the global economy to ruin. Adding insult to injury, banks have jacked up credit card rates to 27 percent and more on the same Main Street taxpayers who rescued them.”

Every day brings more news of their arrogance and avarice.

The Financial Times reports: “U.S. banks stand to collect a record $38.5 billion in fees for customer overdrafts this year, with the bulk of the revenue coming from the most financially stretched consumers amid the deepest recession since the 1930s .... The fees are nearly double those reported in 2000....

“The Federal Reserve is working on rules on overdraft fees, and rules on customer charges could be a priority of the Obama administration’s proposed Consumer Protection Agency if approved by Congress.”

No wonder the banks want to kill the proposed agency.

Bear in mind, this crisis did not happen by accident or just by some mistakes. It was not an accident, argues the The Bond Tangent Blog (Via Baseline Scenario): “Financial institutions did not amass trillions of dollars of toxic assets and tangle themselves up in a destructive web of credit derivatives by accident. Financial institutions did not produce and maintain technology allowing them to take advantage of traditional investors by accident. A thief was not able to operate a multi-billion-dollar Ponzi scheme for decades by accident.

“We are not talking about the occasional rogue trader here who has bribed his compliance officer. Even within the existing regulatory architecture, these activities required a considerable amount of complacency (to be polite) by financial regulators across agencies, over the course of many years, and through many cycles of political appointees from both parties.”

Was it complacency or more like complicity? Nothing is likely to change unless there is pressure from below.

As for the cost of inaction: Obama spoke to that on July 22: “If we don’t pass financial regulatory reform, the banks are going to go back to the same things they were doing before,” he said “In some ways it could be worse, because now they know that the federal government may think they’re too big to fail. And so if they’re unconstrained (by stricter regulations), they could take even more risks.”

Write that down. Put in a bottle or a time capsule, text it as a memo to yourself on your I-Phone and twitter your followers. If the banksters are not brought to heel, we will have survived this crisis only until the next one erupts.

Mediachannel’s NewsDissector Danny Schechter is finishing The Crime of Our Time, a film and book on Wall Street Fraud. (newsdissector.com/plunder.) Comments to dissector@mediachannel,org



 
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