Unemployment
and the Credit Crisis
By
Henry C.K. Liu
This article
appeared in AToL on September 18,
2007
Strong
employment had been a key benefit of the liquidity
boom even though wages had not been rising enough to keep up with asset
prices.
News on slow growth of employment for July 2007 had been an ominous
sign that
the liquidity boom was ending. Economists know that employment data are
a
lagging indictor, showing only the effects of previous periods. Yet
official
unemployment for July was only 4.6%, or 7.1 million workers, still
“uncomfortably”
near the bottom of the structural
range (4 to 6%)
of what neo-classical economists call a non-accelerating inflation rate
of
unemployment (NAIRU). The low structural unemployment rate presented a
lingering inflation threat. It will continue to do so until
unemployment rises past
the 6% NAIRU limit to stall the economy with deflation.
The
Voodoo Theory of
Structural Unemployment
Central banks
operate on some voodoo theory that NAIRU is
the cardinal rule to keep inflation in check, using current
unemployment to
fight future unemployment, keeping some people out of work now in hope
of
enabling more people working later. The rationale is that excessively
low
unemployment is undesirable because it pushes up wages to cause
wage-pushed inflation
which will require central banks to raise interest rate which will in
turn slow
the economy to increase unemployment down the road. This necessary
unemployment
is called structural or natural unemployment and up to 6% of it must be
tolerated to maintain a non-accelerating inflation rate. In other word,
there
is no case for central bank intervention as long as unemployment stays
below
6%.
The problem with the
concept of NAIRU is that when wages
have persistently failed to rise as fast as the astronomical rate of
asset
appreciation, any talk of wage-pushed inflation is perverse and does
not need
6% unemployment to contain. This is
particularly true when outsourcing of jobs to low-wage countries has
kept
inflation abnormally low. In fact, full employment with rising wages is
an
effective way to close the wide gap between stagnant wage income and
run-away asset
prices buoyant by debt.
Not only is NAIRU a
dubious theory, particularly in a debt
bubble, it is also decidedly a pervert moral posture of neo-liberalism.
NAIRU
condones a policy of making a helpless minority pay heavily now for
maximizing
future marginal job opportunity that may benefit the majority, instead
of
foregoing future maximization to ensure that all can have jobs now to
share the
benefits of full employment equitably. The equity issue is exacerbated
when
structural unemployment consistently falls on the same segment of the
labor
force that is least able to fend for itself.
Credit Crisis
Aggravated by Stagnant Wages
The credit crisis
since August 2007 is obviously caused by years
of systemic credit abuse, but it is aggravated by stagnant wages that
have been
out of step with run-away debt-pushed asset inflation for almost a
decade.
Throughout the nation, workers have been forced to live in homes priced
at
levels their wages cannot support because wages have persistently
fallen behind
home prices.
The resilience of US
equity markets, buoyant by robust
employment and strong corporate earnings fuel by cheap debt, has been
frequently cited by irrational yet unyielding optimists as proof that
the
credit crisis in the money markets is merely a passing shower in
otherwise fair
economic weather. The reality is that the robust employment and strong
corporate earnings have been the unsustainable result of systemic
credit abuse.
This illusion, formed by mistaking debt-pushed exuberance in the stock
market
as a sign of health in the economy, was shattered on Friday, September
7, by
news of the first job contraction in four years which many market
participants
regard as the first signs of a financial perfect storm.
Having bought into
the myth of a benign decoupling of the
credit squeeze from the real economy, analysts had expected a gain of
110,000
new jobs for August. The unwarranted expectation caused market shock
sparking
sharply lower stock prices when the ugly reality showed a loss of 4,000
jobs.
Normally, central banks, driven by an institutional bias bordering on
phobia toward
inflation threats, would consider unemployment rising up toward 6%
positive
news since it removes inflationary pressure. But the news of a reverse
in
employment in August spooked the jittery market, even though the
overall unemployment
rate stayed at a benign 4.6%. The market
surmises that when the credit market collapses even with low structural
unemployment, the economy is heading for serious trouble.
Talks of recession
immediately proliferated in the media as
it finally dawned on even the most doggedly wishful-thinking analysts
that
August was the month that economic reality set in to dispel doctrinaire
myths
which assert that economic fundamentals can remain strong in finance
capitalism
even when financial markets seize up.
Waves of layoffs had been anticipated in all housing and financial
services related sectors in recent months, but unemployment was still
expected
to stay below the 6% NAIRU level, posing no serious threat to the
economy
except inflation. This is the reason the Fed has been reluctant to
lower the
Fed Funds rate target.
Now, suddenly in
August, like the subprime mortgage crisis spreading
to the entire financial system, contagion is spreading unemployment to
all sectors.
The market fears that unemployment might shoot above 6% within a few
short months
because layoffs have been made easy and swift for corporate management
by
government policy in the last decade. Whether the Fed will lower the
Fed Funds
rate target in the next FOMC meeting on September 18 depends on whether
the Fed
sees 6% unemployment is on the horizon.
Poor Employment Data
tilted Market Sentiment
Despite reports of
massive bank exposure approaching $1
trillion to the system-wide credit squeeze from a 13.4% contraction of
the
commercial paper market in the past four weeks, the mood among equity
investors
had still been one of cautious optimism sustained by silly pep talks
from giddy
analysts. That unwarranted optimism evaporated with the jobs report for
August.
Share prices fell
and both corporate bonds and Treasuries
rallied to push yields down sharply on the very day of the bad news on
jobs, as
traders fled to safety on the realization that many more homeowners
will have
difficulty meeting higher adjusted interest payments in their
floating-rate
mortgages later this year and the next when unemployment rises further.
Recession risks are overshadowing rate cut hopes as market participants
begin
to understand that rates cuts can be neutralized by a liquidity trap in
which
banks cannot find enough credit-worthy borrowers at any rate.
The interest rate
futures market was already pricing in a
Fed Funds rate of 4.57% by the end of October, a 68 basis points drop
from
current Fed Funds target of 5.25%. Fear remains that rate cuts not only
may not
help alleviate the present credit squeeze in the non-bank financial
system, it
could also be a psychological trigger that would destroy the Fed’s
already
dwindling credibility. A market that catches on to the impotence of
central
bank intervention can go into a free fall.
Interest Rate Cut Stimulates
More Risk Appetite
In fact, a program
of sharp rate cuts will render risk-averse
investment unattractive and revive insatiable risk appetite for
abnormally high
returns that has landed the economy in its current sorry state in the
first
place. A case can be made that what is needed under current conditions
is not
more cheap money from the Fed, but full employment with rising wages by
government fiscal stimulants to boost consumer demand. The
government should make use of the money
that the banks cannot find worthy borrowers to lend to, and the money
cautious
investors are seeking to lend to the government, creating jobs for
infrastructure rehabilitation and upgrading education to get the
economy moving
again off the destructive track of privatized systemic financial
manipulation.
Credit Market Seizure
Causes More Unemployment
The scurry by banks
to shore up their deteriorating balance
sheets as the commercial paper market dries up as a source of funding
for many of
their highly-leveraged borrowers could slow down bank funding for
consumer
credit further to cause a downward spiral of more layoffs in the
already anemic
economy. Also, as recently completed private equity deals structured
with cheap
money turn distressed with a credit squeeze, massive layoffs in the
target
companies will follow, adding to further sharp rise in unemployment.
Rate Cuts Hurt Exchange
Rate of the Dollar to Cause Inflation
More ominous, the
wide anticipation for a rate cut by the
Fed on its September 18 FOMC meeting has already pressured the exchange
rate of
the dollar, pushing up gold prices. By September 12, the GLD exchange-traded
fund (ETF) for gold set a 52-week
high of $70 with the gold prices rising above $700 per ounce from $610
in
January. Oil has risen to over $79 per barrel. Food prices are rising.
A
further weakening of the dollar combined with faster growing economies
in
emerging markets means foreign investors would invest in non-dollar
zones or in
US companies that have non-dollar revenue, further weaken the US
domestic market.
All 10 major sectors
in the S&P fell lower on Friday,
September 7, and for the week, the consumer discretionary sector fell
3.2% amid
fears over lower consumer spending. Homebuilders lost 6.8% for the
week, taking
its fall for the year to 50%. Financials declined 2.6% for the week,
while the
S&P investment bank index fell 0.8% on the day of the discouraging
jobs
report, taking its loss for the year to 16.5%. Investors are still
waiting
nervously to see whether the market can clear a backlog of $300 billion
in
unsold debt paper and bonds associated with this year’s record private
equity
buy-out deals.
In the midst of all the negative news, it is sometime forgotten
that the DJIA is still above 13,000, a level substantially higher than
economic
fundamentals would justify. Left alone, a truly free market would
adjust
downward by as much as 40% before all the liquidity fluff is removed.
The
pleasure of excess in the market is never restrained by the excess of
pleasure
which unfortunately must be paid for at some point by pain in the
economy.
Structural Disparity
in Job Opportunity
Still, structural
disparity in job opportunity persists in
the faltering economy. In August, white unemployment was at 4.2%, below
the
overall rate of 4.6%; African American at 8.0%; Hispanic at 5.9% and
Asian at
3%. The last two categories did not include illegal immigrants which
could
alter data on underemployment substantially. Teenage unemployment
(16-19) was
at 15.2% while black teen unemployment was 26.5%. The pain of NAIRU has
not
been equitably shared even in the liquidity boom. The rising tide
failed to
lift all boats.
Hidden unemployment
was 16.2 million or 10.3% of the labor
force. They included 4.3 million who had part-time jobs because they
could not
find fully time employment and 4.8 million who wanted jobs but were not
counted
in official statistics because they were not looking, of which about
1.4
million searched for work during the prior 12 months and were available
for
work during the reference week.
In addition,
millions more were working full-time,
year-round, yet earned less than the official poverty level for a
family of four. In 2005, the latest year
data were available, that number was 17.0 million, 16.2% of full-time
workers. In
June, 2007, the latest month available, the number of job openings was
only 4.3
million, nearly 4 job-seekers for each job opening, while corporate
earnings
continued to rise from job outsourcing and financial manipulation such
as share
buy-backs made possible by a liquidity boom.
Phantom Strong
Economic
Fundamentals
With the
liquidity boom abruptly halted, residual robust
employment and corporate earnings had been misidentified as the alleged
remaining “strong” economic fundamentals to which high government
officials and
Wall Street cheer leaders misleadingly referred, in defiance of facts
even
weeks after the subprime mortgage crisis broke out.
Even honest fools would know that a collapse
of credit markets would lead quickly to rising unemployment and falling
corporate profits, and high government officials and high-paid analysts
are
surely not fools. The issue then must be one of honesty.
Non-farm
payroll employment dropped by 4,000
in August to 138 million, and the unemployment rate remained at 4.6% or
7.1
million workers, more than the total population of any one US city except New York. Still,
4.6% is uncomfortably on the low end of NAIRU (4 to 6%) and that means
an
interest rate cut now would risk inflation down the road in a faltering
economy, i.e., stagflation, as in the Carter/Volcker years of
1977-81. This is the dilemma faced by the Fed, a cut
in short-term rates may do more harm than good by not helping to
sustain a
liquidity boom yet fueling accelerated inflation, not to mention
leading to a
loss of confidence of the market in the Fed’s ability to manage a
monetary and financial crisis.
Socialize Risk to Deliver Privatized Profit
Like their flawed
attitude toward risk, the authorities in charge of regulating financial
markets
and the economy apparently think that inflation-fighting structural
unemployment
spread over the whole economic system is not damaging to the economy as
long as
the resultant profit is privatized and concentrated on a preferred
selection of
financial institutions, even if the privatized profit is achieved by
externalizing
the cost of risk to the entire financial system through structured
finance.
Free-market capitalists obviously think that socializing risk or
unemployment
is not dreaded evil socialism, only socializing profit is.
Drop in Labor Force Participation
Over third quarter
of
2007, total payroll employment changes have averaged 44,000 new jobs
per month,
well below the monthly average of 147,000 new jobs between January and
May. In August, employment in manufacturing,
construction, and local government education declined, while job growth
continued in health care and food services. The civilian labor force
edged down
to 152.9 million, and the labor force participation rate decreased to
65.8%. The declines were largely due to a drop in
labor force participation among teenagers; their participation rate
fell to
39.7%. Total employment in August was
145.8 million.
Part-time and Temporary Workers
The number of
persons working
part time for economic reasons, at 4.5 million in August, 2007, was
359,000
higher than a year earlier. This
category includes persons who indicated that they would like to work
full time
but were working part time because their hours had been cut back or
because
they were unable to find full-time jobs.
Nearly 1.4 million
persons (not seasonally adjusted) were only marginally attached to the
labor
force in August, down by 227,000 from a year earlier. These
individuals wanted and were available
to work and had looked for a job sometime during the prior 12
months. They were not counted as unemployed because
they had not searched for work in the 4 weeks preceding the
survey. Among the marginally attached, there were
392,000 discouraged workers in August, little different from a year
earlier. Discouraged workers are those not currently
looking for work specifically because they believe no jobs are
available for
them even if they try. The nearly one
million remaining persons marginally attached to the labor force in
August had
not searched for work in the 4 weeks preceding the survey for reasons
such as
school attendance and family responsibilities.
Drop in Employment in August
The overall drop in
employment in August was preceded by negligible job growth in June
(+69,000)
and July (+68,000), as revised. In
August, employment continued to fall in manufacturing and construction;
local
government education also lost jobs. Job
gains continued in health care and in food services and drinking places.
Manufacturing
employment
declined by 46,000 in August, losing 215,000 jobs over the past
year. In August, declines were widespread among
component industries: for durable goods, job losses in motor vehicles
and parts
were 11,000, machinery 7,000, wood products 7,000, furniture and
related
products 4,000, and semiconductors and electronic components
4,000. For nondurable goods, manufacturing job loss continued
with 4,000 in apparel and 2,000 in textile mills. Construction
employment
declined in August by 22,000, with most of the loss occurring among
residential
specialty trade contractors. Since its
most recent peak in September 2006, construction employment has fallen
by
96,000. Employment in local government education fell by 32,000 in
August, as seasonal
hiring was less than usual.
Health care
employment
continued to grow in August (+35,000); the industry added 396,000 jobs
over the
year. In August, the good news was that employment
continued to grow in all the components of health care: ambulatory care
services (+18,000), hospitals (+11,000), and nursing and residential
care
(+6,000). The bad news was that this was
the sector with the highest inflation rates.
Employment in social assistance rose by 14,000 and was 83,000 above its
year-ago level, showing that the economic cancer of income disparity
was
growing faster than the economy as a whole.
Within leisure and
hospitality, food services and drinking places, employment continued to
expand in
August (+24,000). The industry has added
350,000 jobs over the year, showing that the rich were still enjoying
the good
life, albeit employment in the accommodations industry has trended down
over the
past 3 months due to a drop in business traveling and middle income
family
vacationing.
Employment in retail
trade was little changed in August because of back-to-school shopping.
A job
gain in building material and garden supply stores was partially offset
by a
decline in general merchandise stores.
Wholesale trade employment changed little in August because
unemployment
in these sectors tends to have longer lag time.
Employment in
financial
activities was flat in August, following a large increase in
July. Within the industry, employment in credit
intermediation edged down over the month and was 19,000 below its most
recent
peak in February 2007. The trend is expected to rise sharply in coming
months
to reflect turmoil in the credit market. One company, Countrywide,
alone
announce a job cut program of 12,000 in the next three months. The
mortgage
brokerage industry is expected to lose 100,000 jobs this year. A sharp
shift in
employment from deal making to distress restructuring is expected.
In professional and
business services, management and technical consulting services added
7,000
jobs in August, and temporary help employment continued to trend down.
Temporary help has lost 72,000 jobs thus far in 2007 as companies
downsize by
first shedding temporary workers with no severance cost and pension
liabilities.
Average hourly
earnings
of production and non-supervisory workers on private non-farm payrolls
increased by 5 cents, or 0.3%, in August to $17.50, seasonally adjusted. Average weekly earnings grew by 0.3% over the
month to $591.50. The CPI (Consumer
Price Index) in July was 2.4% higher than in July 2006. August
2007 CPI
data are scheduled to be released on September 19, 2007, at 8:30 am EST, one day after the
scheduled Fed Open Market
Committee (FOMC) meeting that decides on Fed Funds rate targets. The
Employment
Situation for September 2007 is scheduled to be released on Friday,
October 5,
at 8:30 a.m. (EDT), three
weeks before the scheduled two-day meeting of the FOMC on October 30-31.
The Honest Services
Issue of Public Officials
On Friday, September
7, the disappointingly bad news on
August employment was released to the public at 8:30
a.m. EST by the Bureau of
Labor Statistics. Although the data had been
embargoed until official release time, surely both the Fed and the
Treasury had
advanced knowledge of BLS data as they were collected. It is
inexplicable why
those in charge of maintaining the sustainability of a healthy economy
and open
and transparent markets would knowingly pronounce misleading prognosis
on
economic trends that they know to be false and that would be refuted by
pending
public release of official data in a matter of days. Do these officials
not
realize that by not coming clean before the sun rises on what they know
to be
false, they damage rather than promote market confidence in their
ability to
manage the economy?
By any measure, the
employment data for August were
discouraging. Yet on Thursday evening, September 6, 2007, some 12 hours
before the public release of the dismal BLS
August employment data, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said in an
interview
on Nightly Business Report on PBS that turmoil in credit markets will
only
exact a price on the US
economy but would not stall its growth. “There will be a penalty to our
economic growth and I'm quite comfortable that we're going to continue
to grow,
create jobs,” said Paulson. “We have a very strong economy against the
backdrop
of these stresses and strains in the capital markets,” the US Treasury
chief
added confidently.
The Treasury
Secretary’s bravado was not echoed by market
confidence the next day. Mortgage defaults continue to soar to seize up
credit
markets as lenders grow increasingly reluctant to lend and investors to
invest
in commercial paper amid uncertainty about the true conditions of
portfolios
with risky mortgages that have been packaged into synthetic tranches of
securities, given investment-grade ratings by rating agencies and sold
in
credit markets to unidentified investors around the world, leaving the
market
scrambling to determine which institutions are left holding the unsold
toxic
commercial papers.
When asked how long
he thought it would take to sort out the
stress in capital/debt markets and determine how serious the contagion
problems
actually are in subprime mortgage loans, Paulson, having repeatedly
declared
that problem had been contained in previous weeks, now said: “It's
certainly
going to be into the weeks, maybe a matter of months. I have a
difficult time
making projections, but it will be a while.”
It is not clear if
Paulson, the nation’s highest finance
official, was making a political statement or deliberately false market
analysis by someone in the position to know about the true state of
finance in
the economy. The US Treasury for over a decade under both Democrat and
Republican administrations has been the branch of the government most
responsible for pushing financial globalization to produce a strong
US-dominated
global economy at the expense of a weak US
domestic economy held up by debt. The situation makes it very difficult
for the
Fed to use monetary ease, i.e., lowing dollar interest rates, to
stimulate the US
economy without pushing the exchange rate of dollar down, which will
further
weaken the US domestic economy. A collapse of the dollar will make a
recession seem like tea
dance by comparison.
Enron Executive not
Guilty?
It should be
recalled that Enron top executives who made
similar, knowingly false statements about their company to calm markets
were
convicted of fraud and sent to prison for it. The conviction was based
on the
so-called “honest services” theory that the defendants had conspired to
deprive
the company of.
On September 11,
Paulson finally came clean on the
seriousness of the crisis of confidence in credit markets and admitted
that it
would take longer to work out than previous financial shocks of the
past two
decades, such as the 1982 Latin American debt crisis, the 1997 Asian
financial crisis
and the 1998 Russian bond default that sank LTCM, a big,
highly-leveraged hedge
fund. The uncertainty over the distribution of holdings and the
complexity of valuing
structured finance instruments based on subprime mortgages could last
for up to
two years, as many such loans reset to higher rates over time. Still,
he
assures the market that the US
economy is fundamentally strong, a position that instead of calming
markets
only makes him seem disconnected to reality.
Paulson spoke in Washington
as Jean-Claude Trichet, the European Central Bank president, warned
that it was
time for global financial authorities to tackle unregulated entities
whose
activities had contributed to the latest upheavals. Ratings agencies
were called
to a special meeting for questioning by regulators on the way they
rated
structured financial products based on mortgage collaterals.
As Treasury
Secretary, Paulson of course enjoys legal
immunity on misleading political statements that technically stay clear
of
perjury or other impeachable offenses. And no suggestion is made here
that Paulson
is not an honorable man. Yet moral immunity from robbing society of
“honest
services” by the Treasury Secretary of the world’s most powerful
economy is a
different matter in the court of public opinion and in the judgment of
history.
Interestingly, the
day after the Paulson interview on PBS,
former Enron CEO Jeff Skilling filed an appeal before the Fifth Circuit
Appeals
Court in New Orleans more than 15 months after he was convicted and
nearly nine
months after he began serving a 24-year, four-month prison term in
southern
Minnesota.
Skilling’s top-rated
legal team, led by Daniel M.
Petrocelli, who also famously won a wrongful death civil suit against
O.J.
Simpson on behalf of Fred Goldman, surviving father of murdered victim
Ron
Goldman, argues that errors by prosecutors and US District Judge Sim
Lake, who
presided over Skilling’s first trial in Houston, require the appeals
court to
overturn all 19 of his convictions of conspiracy, securities fraud,
insider-trading and lying to auditors. “They were in search of crimes
knowing
this wasn't a clear-cut case, and in particular, that Jeff Skilling
hadn't done
anything wrong,” said Petrocelli in an interview, whose firm, O’Melveny
&
Meyer, reportedly was owed $30 million in legal fees by Skilling from
the first
trial.
The appeal said the
government sought to criminalize normal
business activities in its zeal to ensure someone paid for Enron’s
failure.
“That someone was Jeff Skilling — the last man standing when the court
meted
out its punishment,” the appeal said. Former Enron Chairman Ken Lay,
Skilling’s
co-defendant in their fraud and conspiracy trial last year, died six
weeks
after the pair was convicted, vacating his criminal liability.
The major arguments presented by the appeal include:
a) Prosecutors used a flawed theory that Skilling robbed
Enron of his “honest services” to prove the overarching count of
conspiracy to
commit securities and wire fraud. A Fifth Circuit panel rejected that
prosecution theory in a share-holder class action suit against Enron
two months
after Skilling’s conviction.
b) Judge
Lake
gave flawed jury instructions, most notably allowing jurors to find
Skilling
guilty of deliberately ignoring fraud when his defense was that no
fraud
existed. Lake refused to move the
trial from Houston,
where the defense contends anger about those hurt by Enron’s collapse
poisoned
the jury pool. Skilling never asserted an “ostrich” defense, a usual
prerequisite to issuing the “deliberate ignorance” instruction.
c) Skilling’s prison
term is excessive and unconstitutional, being four times
longer than any other convicted Enron executive, two to three times
longer than
comparable white-collar defendants and six years longer than the
average
federal sentence for murder, albeit slightly less than the
record-breaking 25
years in prison being served by Bernie Ebbers, the former boss of
bankrupt
WorldCom.
Judge
Patrick Higginbotham of the Fifth Circuit signaled
last December that Skilling’s legal argument could be well received
regarding
14 of the 19 counts. In a ruling denying Skilling’s request to remain
free on
bond during appeal, Higginbotham pointed to “serious frailties” in
those
counts, noting “difficulties brought by a decision of this court handed
down
after the jury's verdict.” Higginbotham did not sit on the panel that
issued
the honest services decision, but he also wrote that Skilling had not
raised
issues likely to lead to reversal of all his convictions.
Skilling’s appeal argues, however, that the prosecution’s
“honest services” theory taints all the other counts and that Skilling
should
get a new trial. The theory took a judicial hit in August 2006 when the
appeals
panel threw out convictions of four former Merrill Lynch & Co.
executives
in the Enron case. The judges said prosecutors improperly argued that
the
defendants robbed Enron of their “honest services” when they helped
push
through a loan on Nigerian barges disguised as an asset sale in late
1999 to
help the energy company meet its missed earnings targets.
The appeals panel ruled that the “honest services” theory
did not apply because the Merrill Lynch defendants acted in Enron’s
corporate
interests and did not take money or property from the energy company,
even
though their firm profited financially from the arrangement. There was
no
criminality because the money came from society, an entity that
apparently has
no court-recognized legal rights or advocate of legal standing in the
legal
system of market capitalism.
Prosecutors in the Skilling case had argued that he “robbed”
Enron of his “honest services” by breaching his duty to make sure
financial
statements correctly reflected the state of the company.
Skilling argues in his appeal that he did not steal
anything. Yet he was unjustly convicted of one count of conspiracy, a
dozen counts
of securities fraud, one count of insider trading and five counts of
making
false statements to auditors, while he was acquitted of nine counts of
insider
trading. The “honest services” theory was presented by the prosecution
only
with the conspiracy count, but the appeal argues an instruction Judge
Lake gave
the jury links it to the
other counts as well. Oral arguments in the appeals case are expected
to be
scheduled for 2008.
Conflict between
Systemic Guilt and Individual Guilt
The issue raised by the Skilling appeal, beyond the legal
technicalities, was a conflict between systemic failure and individual
responsibility. The court found Skilling guilty personally to absolve
the
system from guilt. The Appeals Court
has ruled in related cases that convicted defendants were acting within
the
laws and regulations then governing their behavior. The Court’s
decision implies
that criminality rests with the system, not the individuals involved.
However,
logic would suggest that Skilling, by participating in a guilty system,
cannot
escape personal criminality even though he did not violate any laws of
the
system. That logic has been firmly established by the historic
Nuremburg trials
for war criminals.
Over the years of the liquidity boom, some people have
profited very handsomely securitizing and selling subprime mortgages.
These
people were not even required to pay their fair share of taxes. Now in
the consequential
liquidity bust, these same people are home free because they have
passed the
risk onto unsuspecting money market and pension funds that hold the
savings of middle
income citizens. The structured financiers are keeping their ill-earned
profit
while the massive loss will be borne by million of others who
innocently thought
they were investing in risk-averse instruments created by the same
financiers. Even
the former Chairman of the Federal Reserve had been on record for
having said
publicly that systemic risk is a good trade-off for unprecedented
economic
expansion. There is a high probability that individuals responsible for
the
credit melt-down that will hurt millions will be brought to justice
before the
end of the day. The uncertainty is who they would be. |