The Shape of US
Populism
By
Henry C.K. Liu
Part I: Legacy of
Free Market Capitalism
Part II: Long-term
Effects of the Civil War
Part
III: The Progrssive Era
Part IV: A Panic-Stricken
Federal Reserve
This article appeared in AToL
on April 2, 2006
The recent moves by the Fed in the months
following the
credit market seizure of August 2007 to inject liquidity into a failed
credit
market and to bail out distressed banks and brokerage houses caught
with
holding securities of dubious market value are looking more like fixes
for drug
addicts in advance stages of abuse. So far, many of the actions taken
by the
Fed to deal with the credit crisis have been self neutralizing, such as
pushing
down short-term interest rates to try to save wayward institutions
addicted to
fantastic returns from highly leveraged speculation, only to cause the
dollar
to free fall, thus causing dollar interest rates and commodity prices,
including
food and energy, to rise.
First,
four months after the August 2007 credit market seizure, the Fed
announced on December 12,
2007
the Term Auction Facility (TAF) program, under which the Fed will
auction term
funds to depository institutions against the wide variety of collateral
that
can be used to secure loans at the discount window. By allowing
the Fed
to inject term funds through a broader range of counterparties and
against a
broader range of collateral than open market operations, this facility
was
intended to help promote the efficient dissemination of liquidity when
the
unsecured interbank markets came under stress. Each TAF auction was to
be for a
fixed amount, with the rate determined by the auction process subject
to a
minimum bid rate. The first TAF auction of $20 billion was
scheduled for
December 17, with settlement on December 20; this auction provided
28-day term
funds, maturing January 17,
2008.
The second auction of up to $20 billion was scheduled for December 20,
with
settlement on December 27; this auction provided 35-day funds, maturing
January 31,
2008. The third and
fourth auctions were held on Mondays, January 14 and 28, with
settlement on the
following Thursdays. The amounts of those auctions were
determined in
January. The Fed would conduct additional auctions in subsequent
months,
depending in part on evolving market conditions.
Experience
gained under this temporary program was expected to be helpful in
assessing the potential usefulness of augmenting the Fed’s current
monetary
policy tools--open market operations and the primary credit
facility--with a
permanent facility for auctioning term discount window credit.
The Board
anticipated that it would seek public comment on any proposal for a
permanent
term auction facility. In other words, the Fed had no idea how the
market would
react to its TAF program.
At
the same time, the Fed Open Market Committee (FOMC) authorized
temporary
reciprocal currency arrangements (swap lines) with the European Central
Bank
(ECB) and the Swiss National Bank (SNB). These arrangements
provided
dollars in amounts of up to $20 billion and $4 billion to the ECB
and the
SNB, respectively, for use in their jurisdictions. The FOMC
approved
these swap lines for a period of up to six months.
On December
21, 2007, the Fed announced its intention to conduct
biweekly TAF
auctions for as long as necessary to address elevated pressures in
short-term
funding markets. The Board of Governors was to announce the sizes of
the
January 14 and January 28 TAF auctions at noon
on January 4.
On January
4, 2008,
the Fed announced it would conduct two auctions of 28-day credit
through its
TAF in January, increasing to $30 billion the auction to be held on
January 14
and $30 billion in the auction to be held on January 28.
On February 1, 2008, the Fed announced it
would conduct two
auctions of 28-day credit through its TAF in February, offering $30
billion in
an auction to be held on February 11 and $30 billion again in an
auction to be
held on February 25, making the total in February $60 billion. To
facilitate
participation by smaller institutions, the minimum bid size will be
reduced to
$5 million, from $10 million in the previous auctions.
On February
29, 2008, the Fed announced it would conduct two auctions of
28-day
credit through its TAF in March. It would offer $30 billion in an
auction
to be held on March 10 and $30 billion in an auction to be held on
March 24,
making the total for March $60 billion.
But on March
7, 2008,
the Fed announced two new initiatives to address continuing heightened
liquidity pressures in term funding markets. First, the amounts
outstanding in
the TAF will be increased to $100 billion from $30 billion. The
auctions
on March 10 and March 24 each would be increased to
$50 billion--an increase
of $20 billion from the amounts that were announced for these auctions
on
February 29. The Fed would increase these auction sizes further if
conditions
warrant. To provide increased certainty to market participants,
the Fed
would continue to conduct TAF auctions for at least the next six months
unless
evolving market conditions clearly indicate that such auctions are no
longer
necessary. The Fed was acknowledging that the credit market crisis was
not a
passing storm and that its previous TAF auctions did not produce the
intended
effect in the market.
Second, beginning immediately, the Fed
initiated a series of
term repurchase transactions that were expected to cumulate to $100
billion. These transactions would be conducted as 28-day term
repurchase
(repo) agreements in which primary dealers may elect to deliver as
collateral
any of the types of securities--Treasury, agency debt, or agency
mortgage-backed securities--that are eligible as collateral in
conventional
open market operations. As with the TAF auction sizes, the Fed
would
further increase the sizes of these term repo operations if future
conditions
should warrant. The Fed announced that it was in close consultation
with
foreign central bank counterparts concerning liquidity conditions in
markets.
See my September 29, 2005
AToL article: The
Repo Time
Bomb.
On March 20,
Bloomberg.com ran a report by Liz
Capo McCormick – Treasuries’
Scarcity Triggers Repo Market Failures:
Surging
demand for US Treasuries is
causing failures to deliver or receive government debt in the $6.3
trillion a
day market for borrowing and lending to climb to the highest level in
almost
four years.
Failures,
an indication of scarcity, surged to $1.795 trillion in the
week ended March 5, the highest since May 2004, and up from $374
billion the
prior week. They have averaged $493.4 billion a week this year,
compared with
$359.6 billion over the last five years and $168.8 billion back through
July
1990, according to data from the New York Fed.
Investors
seeking the safety of government debt amid the loss of
confidence in credit markets pushed rates on three-month bills today to
0.387
percent, the lowest level since 1954. Institutions worldwide have
reported $195
billion in writedowns and losses related to subprime mortgages and
collateralized debt obligations since the start of 2007, making firms
reluctant
to hold anything but Treasuries as collateral on loans.
‘It
shows you the kind of anxieties that are going on and the keen demand
for Treasuries,’ said Tony Crescenzi, chief bond market strategist at
Miller
Tabak & Co. in New York.
“The
rise in fails tells us about the inability of dealers to obtain
Treasury
collateral.”
In
a repurchase agreement, or repo, a customer provides cash to a dealer
in exchange for a bill, note or bond. The exchange is reversed the next
day,
with the customer receiving interest on the overnight loan. A Treasury
security
is termed on ‘special’ when it is in such demand that owners can borrow
cash
against it at interest rates lower than the general collateral rate.
The
Treasury Department cautioned dealers in January to guard against
failing to settle in the Treasury repo market as interest rates fall.
It cited
periods of such failures to receive or deliver securities, known as
`fails' in
the repo market, earlier in the decade when rates dropped.
The
difference between the rate for borrowing and lending non-specific
Treasury securities, or the general collateral rate, has averaged 63
basis
points below the central bank’s target rate for overnight loans this
year. The
spread has averaged about 8 basis points the past 10 years.
Overnight
general collateral repo rates have traded lower than the Fed's
target rate for overnight lending every day this year. The rate on
general
collateral repo closed today [March 20] at 0.9 percent, according to
data from
GovPX Inc., a unit of ICAP Plc, the world's largest inter-dealer
broker,
compared with 1.25 percent yesterday. Today’s rate is 135 basis points
below
the Fed's target rate for overnight lending of 2.25 percent.
A
spokesman for the New York Fed, declined to comment on the fails data.
Nakedcapitalism.com observes that a lot of
Treasuries are
now held by counterparty risk-averse investors who are not interested
in
lending them which could complicate the operation of the Fed’s new
facilities
designed to unfreeze the mortgage market. The Fed may be running into
its own
liquidity constraints as it depletes its Treasury holdings and cannot
add more
non-inflationary “sterilized” liquidity.
The scarcity of Treasuries for repos means that demand for repo
collaterals
will push up Treasury prices and push down yields. Three month Treasury
bills
traded at 0.56% on March 19, a 50-year low, and a stunning 0.39% the
following
day, a rate last seen in 1954, Since bill prices are used as the input
into other pricing models (most notably
the widely used Black-Scholes option pricing model), the distortions in
the
Treasure market have the potential to feed into other markets, such as
the
credit default swaps market.
On March
11, 2008,
the Fed announced that since the coordinated actions taken in December
2007,
the G-10 central banks had continued to work together closely and to
consult
regularly on liquidity pressures in funding markets. Pressures in some
of these
markets had recently increased again. “We all continue to work together
and
will take appropriate steps to address those liquidity pressures. To
that end,
today the Bank of Canada, the Bank of England, the European Central
Bank, the
Federal Reserve, and the Swiss National Bank are announcing specific
measures.”
On the same day, the Fed announced an expansion of
its
securities lending program to include a new Term Securities Lending
Facility
(TSLF), under which the Fed would lend up to $200 billion of Treasury
securities to primary dealers secured for a term of 28 days (rather
than
overnight, as in the existing lending program) by a pledge of other
securities,
including federal agency debt, federal agency
residential-mortgage-backed
securities (MBS), and non-agency AAA/Aaa-rated private-label
residential
MBS. The TSLF is intended to promote liquidity in the financing
markets
for Treasury and other collateral and thus to foster the functioning of
financial markets more generally.
In addition, the Federal Open Market Committee has
authorized increases in its existing temporary reciprocal currency
arrangements
(swap lines) with the European Central Bank (ECB) and the Swiss
National Bank
(SNB). These arrangements will now provide dollars in amounts of
up to
$30 billion and $6 billion to the ECB and the SNB, respectively,
representing
increases of $10 billion and $2 billion. The FOMC extended the
term of
these swap lines through September
30, 2008. The actions announced would supplement the
measures announced
by the Federal Reserve on March 7 to boost the size of the Term Auction
Facility to $100 billion and to undertake a series of term repurchase
transactions that will cumulate to $100 billion.
This program allows primary dealers to exchange a
total of
$200 billion MBS of uncertain market value for Treasuries for 28 days
instead
of the traditional overnight lending. Why $200 billion? Because the Fed
knows
that primary dealers are holding $139.7 billion agency securities and
$60.2
billion private label securities.
In The Wall Street Examiner, Lee Adler wrote in his
article: Bandaid on a Ruptured Jugular:
Why
do prime dealers (PDs) borrow
securities from the Fed? To sell them short. The PDs are heavily short
Treasuries at all times. They are heavily long all other debt
securities
simultaneously. The level of securities lending in recent months is
unprecedented in all of human history, by an order of magnitude of 10.
The Fed is now responding to the pressure of the imminent collapse of
the PDs
and major banks worldwide, because not only are the PDs heavily short
the stuff
that is going up, Treasuries, they are heavily long the stuff that is
going
down, which is all other debt securities. This is the worst of all
possible
worlds and the Fed’s action is like putting a bandaid on a ruptured
jugular
vein.
Stealth Nationalization of the Financial Sector
Adler quotes Steve Randy
Waldman
of Interfluidity (What Happens 28 Days later?): “Since the Fed
cannot retire
loans made via TAF and its repo program without adding to those
“elevated
pressures”, the loans should be considered an equity infusion, because
they’ll
be repaid at the convenience of the borrower rather than on a schedule
agreed
with the lender.” What Waldman did not say was that the Fed had
ventured into a
broad nationalization of the prime dealers on Wall Street by being an
equity
investor.
Does the same argument apply to the new Term Securities Lending
Facility
(TSLF)? On the face of it, it’s harder to view TSLF as an equity
infusion,
since the Fed is not handing out cash. But to firms holding illiquid
securities
that the Fed will accept as collateral, the program is equivalent to a
not-so-efficient cash infusion, because the Treasuries the Fed lends
are liquid
and can be converted to cash easily in private markets, according to
Waldman.
So, this new facility might well be a form of equity, if the Fed is
willing to
roll it over indefinitely and require payment only at the convenience
of
borrowers or when a normal market for them reappears. Waldman thinks
what
happens after 28 days is pretty clear. The swap will be rolled over and
over
and over until the mortgage-backed security market stabilizes. This
could be a
year from now, or perhaps ten. That may sound ridiculous but it is
essentially
what happened in Japan.
Waldman suggests that inquiring minds might ask
what happens
if the value of the MBS drops. Will the Fed issue a margin call or just
look
the other way? … One thing is for sure: The more liberal the Fed is in
valuing
the MBS the more likely a margin call situation arises. However Waldman
strongly suspects the Fed will not disclose who is doing the swapping,
in what
size, or whether the swap ratio is 1:1 or not. So much for transparency.
“This may temporarily stop a further squeeze against dealers who are
short
treasuries and long MBS, but it is will not do much of anything to
restore a
bid in the MBS market. Nor will it cure the massive leverage problems
at many
of the primary dealers and banks,” writes Waldman.
Adler cites an interesting paragraph from a MarketWatch article: “Counting the currency swaps with the foreign
central banks, the Fed has now committed more than half of its combined
securities and loan portfolio of $832 billion,” Lou Crandall, chief
economist
for Wrightson ICAP noted. “The Fed won’t have run completely out of
ammunition
after these operations, but it is reaching deeper into its balance
sheet than
before.”
“Bernanke’s intent is to buy the primary dealers
time, but
it really can’t work. Those securities will not be worth more tomorrow
than
they are today. For now, a MBS fire sale was averted, but it can’t be
put off
forever,” writes Adler.
On March
16, 2008,
the Fed announced that the New York Fed has been granted the authority
to
establish a Primary Dealer Credit Facility (PDCF), intended to improve
the
ability of primary dealers to provide financing to participants in
securitization
markets and promote the orderly functioning of financial markets more
generally. The PDCF will provide overnight funding to primary dealers
in
exchange for a specified range of collateral, including all collateral
eligible
for tri-party repurchase agreements arranged by the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York, as
well as all investment-grade corporate
securities, municipal securities, mortgage-backed securities and
asset-backed
securities for which a price is available. The PDCF will remain in
operation for
a minimum period of six months and may be extended as conditions
warrant to
foster the functioning of financial markets. The TAF
program offers term funding to depository
institutions via a bi-weekly auction, for fixed amounts of credit. The
TSLF
program is an auction for a fixed amount of lending of Treasury general
collateral in exchange for Open-Market-Operation-eligible and AAA/Aaa
rated
private-label residential mortgage-backed securities. The PDCF program
now
allows eligible primary dealers to borrow at the existing Discount Rate
for up
to 120 days.
Down the Slippery
Slope
The moves into new province suggest that the Fed
has changed
its traditional role in the economy with the support of the White House
and the
Treasury. Former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker said in a public television
interview the same evening that the Fed’s decision to lend money to
Bear
Stearns Cos. [via commercial bank JPMorgan-Chase] to keep the
investment house
from collapsing is unprecedented and “raises some real questions” about
whether
that was the appropriate role for the Fed. The wisdom of the decision
depends
on “how severe this crisis was and the Fed’s judgment about the threat
of
demise of Bear Stearns,” Volcker said. “That’s a judgment they had to
make and
an understandable judgment. It is absolutely not what you want for the
longstanding regulatory support system.” The Fed’s action then was an
open
admission that a ominous systemic crisis of total melt down was a clear
and
present danger.
Unlike the TAF which swaps cash for MBS and
therefore
requires sterilization so as not to push the fed funds rate below
target, the
TSLF is simply a swap of one instrument for another, albeit an inferior
one. It
is not printing, and it injects no cash into the system. To avoid the
need to
sterilize the liquidity injection, the Fed exchanged Treasuries in its
procession for securities of dubious market value held by Bear Stearns. Since Bear Stearns is not a banking holding
company and does not own a bank, the Fed could only rescue it by
providing the
funds to JPMorgan Chase, a commercial bank that can access the Fed
discount
window for funds, to acquire Bear Stearns at a fire sale price of $2 a
share, a
ceiling dictated by the Fed to avoid the appearance of bailing out Bear
Stearns
shareholders, while other investors were bidding at $5.98. The shares
had
traded at $170 at its peak in January 2007 and at $67 two weeks before
the
rescue. The Fed will guarantee up to $30 billion of potential losses on
Bear
assets, later reduced to $29 billion with JPMorgan assuming the first
billion
losses. It was the Fed’s first rescue of a prime dealer broker since
the Great Depression and its latest
effort to soothe
financial markets roiled by fallout from rising mortgage defaults.
Latest
reports have JPMorgan renegotiating the sale price at $10 per share to
ward off
shareholder attempts to block the Fed-sponsored deal.
So far, the three special facilities introduced by
the Fed
in quick succession have failed to stabilize the credit market:
The TAF (Term Auction Facility) failed to restore liquidity.
The TSLF (Term Securities Lending Facility) failed to
restore liquidity.
The PDCF (Primary Dealer Credit Facility) can be expected to
fail to save a rising number of distressed primary dealers.
Clearly
the bond market does not believe the TAF, the TSLF, or the PDCF, all
liquidity actions, are going to solve the insolvency problem facing
over-leveraged institutions.
Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke is increasingly
perceived by
the market as running out of room to pump money into the financial
markets and
to cut interest rates to rescue the faltering economy. To providing
liquidity
to the market, the Fed has already committed as much as 60% of the $709
billion
in Treasury securities on its balance sheet. It has opened the door of
moral
hazard to more bailouts with the decision to become a lender of last
resort for
Bear Stearns, one of the biggest Wall Street dealers.
The Fed is now forced to responding to the pressure of the imminent
collapse of
distressed primary dealers and major banks worldwide. Primary dealers
have
routinely heavily shorted Treasuries that are now going up in price,
and
heavily longed all sort of other debt instruments that are now going
down in
price. The normal formula for easy profit has become the worst of all
possible
worlds for primary dealers in times of market distress.
Moreover, the high leverage will magnify the
losses as it did profits during good times. Also structured finance has
generated derivatives that are based on hundreds of trillions of
dollars in
notional value, causing every slight move in interest rate to produce
payment
obligations in hundred of billion of dollars among institutions whose
capital
structures are woefully inadequate.
Legal Challenges
Inner City Press/Community on the Move, a housing
and fair
lending activist group, has challenged the legality of the Fed’s quick
approval
of refinancing for Bear Stearns via JPMorgan Chase, questioning the
Fed’s
authority to approve the deal involving a non-bank institution.
In a complaint filed with the Fed a day after the
Fed
action, Inner City Press labeled the central bank’s brokering of the
Bear
Stearns deal as “entirely illegal” and anticompetitive, and questioned
whether
the required number of Fed Board governors had voted for it.
Bernanke took advantage of little-used parts of Fed law, added in the
1930s and
last utilized in the 1960s, that allow it to lend to corporations and
private
partnerships with a special board vote. Such votes require approval
from five
Fed governors. The seven-member Fed board currently has two vacancies,
and one
governor, Randall Kroszner, is serving past the Jan. 31 expiration of
his term.
Inner City Press questioned the legality of the Fed
approving the Bear Stearns deal without public notice, on the grounds
Bear
Stearns “is not a banking holding company and it does not own a bank.”
It was
the Fed’s first rescue of a broker dealer since the Great Depression
and its
latest effort to soothe financial markets roiled by fallout from rising
mortgage
defaults. The Federal Reserve bypassed its own normal emergency-lending
policies to let securities firms borrow at the same interest rate at
the
discount window as commercial banks as the central bank sought to stave
off a
financial-market meltdown. Guidelines revised in 2002 say the Fed
should charge
non- banks more than the highest rate that commercial banks pay.
Instead, Fed
Chairman Bernanke and his colleagues, in emergency votes on March 16,
invoked
broader authority in the Federal Reserve Act to give Wall Street prime
dealers
the same rate as banks. Backstopping securities firms, coupled with
action to
keep Bear Stearns Cos. afloat before its sale to JPMorgan Chase
represent the
central bank’s first lifelines to institutions other than banks since
the Great
Depression.
Under a regulatory regime dating back to the New
Deal of the
1930s, the Fed oversees commercial banks, but investment banks are
primarily
regulated by the Securities and Exchange Commission which in recent
decades has
become a captured regulator that resembles an asylum run by the inmates.
Senior Fed staffers said the arrangement allows JP
Morgan
Chase to borrow from the Fed’s discount window and put up collateral of
uncertain value from Bear Stearns to back up the loans. JP Morgan, a
bank, has
access to the discount window to obtain direct loans from the Fed, but
Bear
Stearns, an investment house, does not. While JP Morgan is serving as a
conduit
for the loans, the Fed and not JP Morgan will bear the risk if the
loans are
not repaid, officials said. When God sins, the entire theological
structure
rots.
Bernanke raced to unveil the new steps before the
Tokyo
Stock Exchange opened on March 17. The weekend action, timed to
complement
JPMorgan’s rescue of Bear Stearns, included a cut in the discount rate
and the
opening of borrowing to the primary dealers in Treasury securities, not
all of
which are banks. The changes were the Fed’s most aggressive response to
date to
the 8-month-old credit crisis that has spread to the entire US
economy and around the world. See my March 17, 2007 AToL article: Why the Subprime Bust Will Spread,
which was
written five months before the August credit crisis, at a time when
establishment
officials and gurus were assuring the public that the subprime mortgage
problem
was well contained.
The “temporary” facilities for 28 days have been
extended on
increasingly larger scale. If they had a chance at being temporary the
scale
should be getting smaller and not larger. The Fed is putting in
jeopardy its
credibility by pretending that the “temporary facilities” might end or
be
phased out at the end of some future 28-day period when it knew in
advance that
was not possible. Each rollover increases stress in the precarious
financial
system as market participants become dependent on more Fed intervention
to
provide temporary adrenaline to unjustified market exuberance.
The Fed on March 16 cut the discount rate by 25
basis points
to 3.25%. Two days later, on March 18, the Fed slashed its Fed funds
rate
target 75 basis points to 2.25% and the discount rate to 2.50%. US
interest rate has now fallen to negative rate levels, meaning it is now
below
inflation rate.
Another day later, Government Sponsored Enterprises
Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac received permission from regulators to pump as much
as $200
billion of liquidity into the beleaguered US
mortgage market without having to add compensatory capital. For weeks earlier, rumors had been rife about
these two GSEs facing insolvency. Jonathan R. Laing of Barron’s
characterized their shares as “worthless”. At year end 2007, the
company owned
in its portfolio or had packaged and guaranteed some $2.8 trillion of
mortgages
or 23% of all US
residential mortgage debt outstanding. The company lost $2.6 billion in
2007 as
a surge of red ink in the final two quarters more than wiped out a
nicely
profitable first half.
Shortage of Borrowers
Still, even with all the liquidity the Fed has
injected into
the market, few are borrowing except to roll over maturing debts, as
new
profitable investments have become hard to find. Oil
companies are flushed with cash from
windfall profits but they do not seem to be able to find worthwhile
investments
to put the cash to use. Exxon reported a record $39.5 billion annual
windfall
profits for 2007 from high oil prices, exceeding the gross domestic
product of
nearly two thirds of the 183 nations of the world, but the company
failed to
announce any plans for expansion.
The fear is that until prices in the $12 trillion
US
residential housing market stops falling and the pace of foreclosures
ebbs
instead of rises, the pain for banks and non-bank institutions, let
alone home
owners, will continue to get stronger to threaten a much deeper and
broader
economic recession. The hope is that lower mortgage rates would enable
home
owners to cut their borrowing costs as they opt for better terms and
help
cushion the pain of falling home prices. But lower short-term rates
cause the
dollar to fall and long-term rates to rise. Moreover, mortgage defaults
are no
longer caused exclusively by high interest rate resets. Many borrowers
have no
incentive to keep making payments on mortgages on properties with
market values
lower than the outstanding value of the mortgage. Is the Fed in a
position to
pump $4 trillion into the housing market to stabilize inflated home
prices?
New, Stronger Fixes
Every Few Days
Every few days, a new, stronger fix needs to be
administered
by the Fed to sustain a euphoric high in the market that will dissipate
a few
days later, with the inevitable result of a fatal overdose down the
road. All
that produces is a secular bear market, where every rebound is smaller
than the
previous fall, until the debt bubble fully deflates. The bottom line in
the
current financial crisis is no longer one of credit crunch, but of
massive
insolvency in the financial market that will spread to the general
economy,
which no amount of Fed liquidity injection can cure short of
hyperinflation. Further,
there is no guarantee that even accepting hyperinflation will save the
economy
from protracted stagnation. The history of central banking shows that
central
bank policies can cause problems more easily than they can solve
problems they
created earlier. Economic distress from monetary dysfunction cannot be
solved
by merely printing money, which central banks consider their divine
right.
Central banks of the G7 economies are reportedly
actively
engaged in discussions about the feasibility of using public funds for
mass
purchases of mortgage-backed securities as a possible solution to the
credit
crisis. This is essentially an option to nationalize the credit market
after
wholesale deregulation has turned free market capitalism into failed
market
capitalism.
The policy debate has shifted from one on fixing an
appropriate interest rate policy to the need for aggressive
intervention in a
matter of weeks as the crisis spread from the subprime mortgage sector
to
engulf the entire financial system, as evidenced by the sudden collapse
of Bear
Stearns, a major investment bank, that threatens to touch off
widespread
counterparty defaults. Panic appears to have taken over at the highest
levels
in the inner sanctum of the central banking world.
Discord among Central
Banks
The Bank of England reportedly is most enthusiastic
to
explore the idea, as it has a long history of nationalization, the
latest
example being its takeover the Northern Rock Bank, a bug mortgage
lender. The
Federal Reserve is open in principle to the possibility that
intervention in
the MBS market might be justified in certain scenarios, but only as a
last
resort. The European Central Bank appears least enthusiastic, with the
German
central bank adamantly opposed to such heretical proposition.
Jean-Claude Trichet, the ECB president, while
avoiding
immediate critical comment on the Bank of England’s rescue of Northern
Rock,
said: “What is important is that we must not let the mistakes made by
some
impose a high cost on those who have made no mistakes.”
Neoliberal market fundamentalists
continue to argue that new
international bank capital rules requiring assets values to be marked
to market
rather than marked to models have exacerbated the credit squeeze,
despite the
now proven fact that flawed marked-to-model evaluation had been
responsible for
the current crisis. <>
US policymakers are more inclined to boost
support for the
mortgage markets indirectly through the expanding the role of the
Federal
Housing Administration, which provides mortgage insurance on loans made
by
FHA-approved lenders, and
by easing regulatory restraints by the Office
of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO) on Fannie Mae
and
Freddie Mac. OFHEO stated that the required capital surplus for Fannie
Mae and
Freddie Mac will be reduced from 30% to 20%, immediately freeing up
$200-$300
billion for the Government-Sponsored Enterprises [GSEs] to buy
mortgages. <>
This new initiative and the release of the
portfolio caps
announced in February, should allow the GSEs to purchase or guarantee
about $2
trillion in mortgages this year. This capacity will permit them to do
more in
the jumbo temporary conforming market, subprime refinancing and loan
modifications areas.
To support growth and further restore market liquidity, OFHEO announced
that it
would begin to permit a significant portion of the GSEs’ 30 percent
OFHEO-directed capital surplus to be invested in mortgages and MBS. As
a key
part of this initiative, both companies announced that they will begin
the
process to raise significant capital. Both companies also said they
would
maintain overall capital levels well in excess of requirements while
the
mortgage market recovers in order to ensure market confidence and
fulfill their
public mission.
OFHEO announced that Fannie Mae is in full compliance with its Consent
Order
and that Freddie Mac has one remaining requirement relating to the
separation
of the Chairman and CEO positions. OFHEO expects to lift these Consent
Orders
in the near term. In view of this progress, the public purpose of the
two
companies, and ongoing market conditions, OFHEO concludes that it is
appropriate to reduce immediately the existing 30 percent
OFHEO-directed
capital requirement to a 20 percent level, and will consider further
reductions
in the future. However, like
the Fed taking on more risk to bail
out the
mortgage market, the GSEs will do the same, increasing the amount of
mortgages
they will hold for each dollar of capital on its books.
Swinging Back Towards
Re-regulation
As Congress and the Bush administration
struggle to contain
the housing and credit crises and prevent more Wall Street firms from
collapsing as Bear Stearns did, Edmund Andrews and Stephen Labaton of
the New
York Times report that a split is forming over how to strengthen
oversight of
financial institutions after decades of deregulation that had led to
the
meltdown in credit markets to expose weaknesses in the nation’s tangled
web of
federal and state regulators, which failed to anticipate the effect of
so many
new players in the industry.
In the Democrat-controlled Congress, key
committee chairmen,
such as Massachusetts Representative Barry Frank of the House Financial
Services Committee, New York Senator Charles Schumer of the Joint
Economic
Committee and Connecticut Senator Christopher Dodd of the Senate
Banking
Committee, are drafting separate bills that would create a powerful new
regulator or simply confer new powers on the Federal Reserve to oversee
practices across the entire array of commercial banks, Wall Street
firms, hedge
funds and nonbank financial companies.
Sheila C. Bair, chairwoman of the Federal
Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC), which insures deposits at banks and thrift
institutions and
is one of several federal bank regulatory agencies, said: “Capital
levels are
the most important tool we have at the FDIC, and investment banks have
lower
capital levels than commercial banks.”
The Treasury Department of the outgoing
Republican
administration is rushing to complete its own blueprint for overhauling
what is
now an alphabet soup of federal and state regulators that often compete
against
each other and protect their particular slices of the industry as if
they were
constituents. It will unveil its own blueprint for regulatory overhaul
in the
next few weeks. Paulson has acknowledged
that the problems exposed by the housing crisis were diffuse and
complex and
could not be solved with a single action. “There is no silver bullet,”
he kept
repeating. But he suggested that he did not want to take any drastic
regulatory
steps while the financial markets remained in turmoil. “The objective
here is
to get the balance right,” Mr. Paulson said. “Regulation needs to catch
up with
innovation and help restore investor confidence but not go so far as to
create
new problems, make our markets less efficient or cut off credit to
those who
need it.” This attitude has been behind Greenspan’s Fed policy on
regulating
financial innovations for the past two decades.
Ideological Divide
Allows Only Cosmetic Changes
But the two political parties strongly
disagree along
ideological lines about whether, after decades of freewheeling
encouragement of
exotic new instruments like derivatives and new players like hedge
funds, the
pendulum should swing back to tighter control. Wall Street firms have
also been
major contributors to both political parties, and they are certain to
oppose
tough new restrictions. Given the philosophical differences about the
value of
government regulations, it is unlikely that a Democratic Congress and
the
Republican Bush administration would agree on more than cosmetic
changes.
Except for the Federal Reserve, all federal
bank-regulating
agencies receive funding from fees paid by member institutions. These
agencies
have competed with each other to woo institutions with lighter
regulation.
“If we don’t tread very carefully on
restructuring a very
complex financial system, we might stifle the necessary animal
instincts of a
free market,” said Mark A. Bloomfield, president of the American
Council for
Capital Formation, a business advocacy group. “Every day, the cries of
populism
grow stronger and could trample good economic policy.” This warning
against
populism has also come from the host of the Larry Kudlow Show in recent
weeks
as a threat against free market capitalism.
For neoliberal market fundamentalists, the
fear is not of an
economic depression, but the populism that may follow it.
Rights of Labor
The 1912 Democratic platform repeated the
declarations of
the platform of 1908:
Questions
of judicial practice have arisen
especially in connection with industrial disputes. We believe that the
parties
to all judicial proceedings should be treated with rigid impartiality,
and that
injunctions should not be issued in any case in which an injunction
would not
issue if no industrial dispute were involved.
The
expanding organization of industry
makes it essential that there should be no abridgement of the right of
the wage
earners and producers to organize for the protection of wages and the
improvement of labor conditions, to the end that such labor
organizations and
their members should not be regarded as illegal combinations in
restraint of
trade.
The 1912 platform pledge the enactment of a law creating a
department of labor, represented separately in the President’s cabinet.
In
1913, the Labor Department was created by President Wilson in his first
year in
office. The Clayton Act of 1913 exempted unions from the Sherman
Anti-Trust
Act. The Keating-Owen Act of 1916 banned child labor but was annulled
by a
conservative Supreme Court in 1918. The Federal Employees Compensation
Act
established the Office of Workers Compensation Programs in 1916. The
International Labor Organization (ILO) held its first meeting in 1919
in Washington,
chaired by Secretary William B. Wilson, a second generation coal miner
and a
former child laborer.
Civil Liberty
After the 1917 October Revolution in Russia,
more than four
thousand alleged Communists were arrested in the US for deportation
under the
Anarchist Exclusion Act of 1918 in the first anti-communist witch hunt.
The
Department of Labor (DOL) refused to deport the bulk of those arrested
and
Secretary Wilson was threatened with impeachment for taking that
position
despite the fact that the DOL under his leadership helped indispensably
in winning
the war by mobilizing an effective workforce for defense
production. The War on Terrorism is extracting a
heavy toll on US
domestic civil liberty.
Conservation
The 1912 Democratic platform declared:
“…
the Democrat belief in the
conservation and the development, for the use of all the people, of the
natural
resources of the country. Our forests, our sources of water supply, our
arable
and our mineral lands, our navigable streams, and all the other
material
resources with which our country has been so lavishly endowed,
constitute the
foundation of our national wealth. Such additional legislation as may
be
necessary to prevent their being wasted or absorbed by special or
privileged
interests should be enacted and the policy of their conservation should
be
rigidly adhered to.”
The platform called for immediate action by Congress to make
available the vast and valuable coal deposits of Alaska
under conditions that will be a perfect guarantee against their falling
into
the hands of monopolizing corporations, associations or interests.
It pledged to the extension of the work of the
bureau of
mines in every way appropriate for national legislation with a view to
safeguarding the lives of the miners, lessening the waste of essential
resources, and promoting the economic development of mining, which,
along with
agriculture, must in the future, even more than in the past, serve as
the very
foundation of our national prosperity and welfare, and our
international
commerce.
Agriculture
The 1912 Democratic platform supported the
development of a
modern system of agriculture and a systematic effort to improve the
conditions
of trade in farm products so as to benefit both consumer and producer.
And as
an efficient means to this end the platform called for the enactment by
Congress of legislation that “will suppress the pernicious practice of
gambling
in agricultural products by organized exchanges or others.” In order words, future, options and
derivative of all sort that have landed the global economy in dire
stress in
2008, with ruinously high food prices. On this issue, the 1912
Democratic
platform failed spectacularly as structured finance spread beyond
agricultural
commodities to take full control of finance capitalism in the final
quarter of
the twentieth century and landed the global economy in a financial
crisis in
2007.
The Philippines
The 1912 Democratic platform reaffirmed “the
position thrice
announced by the Democracy in national convention assembled against a
policy of
imperialism and colonial exploitation in the Philippines
or elsewhere. We condemn the experiment in imperialism as an
inexcusable
blunder, which has involved us in enormous expense, brought us weakness
instead
of strength, and laid our nation open to the charge of abandonment of
the
fundamental doctrine of self-government. We favor an immediate
declaration of
the nation's purpose to recognize the independence of the Philippine
Islands as
soon as a stable government can be established, such independence to be
guaranteed by us until the neutralization of the islands can be secured
by
treaty with other Powers.”
Progressivism a
Middle Class Movement
Reflecting the socioeconomic makeup of the
nation, with the
emergence of a prosperous middle class, US
progressivism in early 19th century was a movement with
predominantly middle class values and objectives, gaining support from
small
business owners, independent farmers, and professionals such as
lawyers,
doctors, teachers and journalists, as well as the intelligentsia. They
subscribed to ethical, humanitarian and spiritual values rather than
socialist
concepts of class struggle.
Socialism never developed any popular base in US
political culture despite strong communal roots among the early
settlers. No
socialist presidential candidate ever received substantial votes in US
political history. Union leader Eugene
V. Debs, who ran as a Socialist Party candidate in 1908, received
420,793 votes
against the 7,687,908 votes received by William H. Taft; again in 1912
Debs
received 900,672 votes against the 6,293,454 voted received by Woodrow
Wilson;
and finally in 1920 Debs, running from prison serving a ten-year term
for
making an anti-war speech in violation of the Espionage Act of 1917,
received
919,799 votes against 16,152,200 received by Warren G. Harding. The
last
socialist presidential candidate was Norman Thomas who in 1932, in the
depth of
the Great Depression, received 881,951 votes against the 22,831,857
received by
Franklin D. Roosevelt.
As a pragmatic political force, progressivism
found support
among both conservatives and liberals and spread to all regions of the
nation.
Early twentieth-century progressivism turned nineteenth-century
Hamiltonian
preference for strong government to nurture a rich economic elite,
towards
government promotion of Jeffersonian popular democracy in defense of a
large
wage-earning working class dominated by big corporations. This movement
created
a prosperous middle class out of previously exploited workers and
farmers, and
resulted in a prosperous nation.
US Love/Hate towards
Government
All political ideologies realize that
political control of
governmental power is the route to shape the nation to its preference.
As the
nation and its economy grew, attitude toward government changed.
Ideologies
that have already gained dominance to the point of being accepted as
natural
order would resist big government, even if their very ascendance had
been
brought about by government policy. Ideologies that have remained
unfulfilled
would argue for strong government to right the wrongs. When big
business
crusades against big government, it generally means it wants more
freedom for
big business to expand the private sector at the expense of the public
sector.
Big business opposes government interference to protect workers against
corporate abuse. When big business is in distress either from foreign
competition or from internal collapse from excesses, it would call for
government assistance. When populists and progressive reformers crusade
for
government intervention, they generally mean to use political authority
to
correct ossified socio-economic injustice.
Anti-Trust and
Monopolies
The problem of monopolies was the main
contentious issue of
the Progressive Era. Progressives were
not of one mind on this complex, multi-faceted issue.
One group, represented by Theodore Roosevelt,
saw corporate consolidation as inevitable in modern economies and
argued that
the growth of big corporations should be regulated rather than
forbidden. The Roosevelt
faction leaned toward enlarging governmental power, as summarized by
journalist
Herbert Croly in his The Promise of
American Life. Croly argued that
economic injustice should be fought with governmental power and by the
legitimization of a strong labor union movement to balance uneven
market powers
between corporations and workers.
Another group, represented by Woodrow Wilson,
leaned toward
prohibition of bigness in favor of small business to protect
competition,
arguing that bigness by its very nature eventually would make
regulation on it
ineffective without banning bigness. The Wilson
faction leaned instead towards judicial enforcement of constitutional
principles of individualism.
In 1916 Wilson
appointed Louis D. Brandeis to be Chief Justice of the Supreme Court to
prevent
the expansion of the “curse of bigness” by not permitting any one
corporation
to control more than 30% of any market. As a star litigator before the
Supreme
Court, Brandeis filed his famous “Brandeis Brief” to provide the Court
with
sociological information on the issue of the impact of long working
hours on
women. The Brandeis Brief set a new
direction for Supreme Court deliberation and for US
law. It became a model for future Supreme Court presentations.
Together with Brandeis, Roscoe Pound, Harvard
Law School Dean,
and Benjamin Cardozo, known as the Three Musketeers of the liberal
faction of
the Court, argued that justice is more likely to be done if judges take
into
consideration the practical effect of general legal principles.
The Progressive Role
of Muckrakers
The rise of the investigative press played a
crucial role in
winning popular support for progressivism. Labeled by Teddy Roosevelt
as Muckrakers, these pioneering reporters
filed well documented exposé of fraud and graft and corruption. Henry Demarest Lloyd published an anti-trust
report: Wealth against Commonwealth;
Lincoln Steffens reported on political corruption in cities, and Ida
Tarbell’s History of the Standard Oil.
Muckraking after 1914 often degenerated into
unreliable sensational journalism and never quite rose again to the
standards
set by the likes of Lloyd, Steffens and Tarbell, until the anti-Vietnam
War
era. The communication revolution
brought about by the emergence of the Internet will facilitate a new
wave of
populism rising from collapse of the failure of unregulated free market
capitalism.
La Follette and the
Wisconson Idea
Robert Marion La Follette, Republican governor
of Wisconsin,
introduced a series of progressive reforms that came to be known as the
Wisconsin Idea. These reforms included taxation of the railroads,
standardizing
freight rates based on physical weight and size rather than commercial
value,
adoption of income and inheritance taxes, regulation of banks and
insurance
companies, limitation of working hours for women and children, passage
of
workman’s compensation and welfare laws, creation of a forest reserve
and
establishment of primary elections for nomination of candidate for
state
offices. La Follette pioneered the use of nonpartisan experts in
government commissions.
A “new individualism” worked for a better chance for average citizens
to own
property to maintain the Jeffersonian ideal of popular democracy. The
Wisconsin
Idea brought about similar trends in many other states, including Iowa,
Minnesota,
Kansas,
Nebraska
and the Dakotas. Many
progressive governors first attracted
public attention by serving as counsel for commissions set up to
investigate
corruption in big business. Woodrow Wilson, a future president, served
a
Democratic governor of New Jersey
with a progressive program.
Progressive Reforms
Progressivism did not bring about any major
transformation
of the political and economic system partly because it was never its
intention.
It concentrated on a series of specific regulatory reforms, most of
which had
been achieved by 1914. In politics, the movement did much to revitalize
democracy by making public officials and corporate management more
responsive
to public opinion. On economic issues, while progressivism failed to
solve the
problem of monopoly, it extended the power of the Federal and state
governments
to regulate big business through appointive commissions, such as
Interstate
Commerce Commission and the Federal Trade Commission to check the
exploitation
of labor and to conserve natural resources.
More fundamental than any specific reform was
the emergence
of a new attitude espoused by the progressive movement on political and
business leaders to be more sensitive to popular approval beyond legal
and
regulatory bounds. The effect of the progressive movement, while it
might not
have altered the hardnosed mentality of big business, was manifested
through
the presentation of business activities in a favorable light by
spending large
sums on public relations. Effective progressive reform then, as with
democracy
itself, depended henceforth on the informed enlightenment of the voters
and on
their capacity for critically appraising establishment propaganda.
World War I Ended US
Isolationism
World War I made the United
State
realize that despite pioneer
era isolationism, the young nation was not disconnected to the affairs
of Europe.
There was awareness in the minds of the US
elite that a Europe dominated by one single
power is
geopolitically threatening to the national interest of the US,
particularly if the victor should turn out to be Germany.
The US
leadership was primarily in sympathy with British and French
ideological values
and geo-economic interests predominant in the pre-war world order which
was on
the defensive from rising German threat. The debate on the war was
between
supporting the Allies or neutrality. Support for Germany
was never an option. Woodrow Wilson justified the rejection of
isolationism on
the ground of preserving democracy in Europe,
yet the
effect of the war on the US
domestically was an unhappy growth of intolerance.
War and Freedom
Wilson, the self-righteous democrat, told a
close associate
on the eve of his war message to Congress: “To fight you must be brutal
and
ruthless, and the very spirit of ruthless brutality will enter into the
very
fiber of our national life.”
In June 1917, Congress passed the Espionage
Act, imposing
jail penalties for anti-war statements. A year later, the Sedition Act
of 1918
was invoked to imprison 1,597 prominent anti-war activists, including
Eugene
Debs and Victor Berger, Socialist representative from Milwaukee,
the first Socialist congressman in US
history.
The government itself did much to whip up war
hysteria
through the Committee on Public Information headed by investigative
journalist George
Creel, which fabricated images and stories of German soldiers killing
civilian
babies and hoisting them on bayonets, and portraying anti-war activists
as
German spies, particularly among German Americans who were driven from
their
peacetime jobs and made to kiss the American flag in public. A number
of
appeals to the Supreme Court on lower court convictions under the
Espionage and
Sedition Acts were reaffirmed. The eloquent dissenting opinions written
by Justice Oliver
Wendell Homes
on some of these cases enter the legal lexicon, such as the declaration
that
only a “clear and present danger” could justify any abridgement of free
speech.
Victory and Moral
Superiority
The important role of the US
in securing victory for the Allies in WWI gave Wilson
an exaggerated sense of US
moral superiority, notwithstanding that the advantage the US
enjoyed came entirely from its homeland being out of range from enemy
attack.
Prodded by Creel, without seeking Allies agreement, Wilson
came up with his statement of Fourteen Points on January 8, 1918 as broad conditions for
peace. Six of the points concerned broad
ideals
which included open covenants of peace; freedom of the seas, removal of
economic barriers between nations; reduction of armament, settlement of
competitive
claims on colonies by great powers but not decolonization; and a League
of Nations. The other eight points deals with territorial
redistributions and self-determination for nationalities in fallen
empires,
except for nonwhites such as Africans, Asians and Arabs.
In October, 1919, the German government
indicated its
willingness to accept a peace based on the Fourteen Points, but Britain
and France
insisted on modifications on freedom of the seas and the imposition of
punitive
war reparations. Revolution in Germany
forced the Kaiser to flee to Holland
and the Social Democrats set up the Weimar
Republic.
The war incurred over 10
million deaths and burnt up $200 billion, or $3 trillion in current
dollars.
The US
lost
50,000 soldiers with no civilian casualty on US
soil. The US
spent a total of $32 billion on the war, about $10 billion of which
represented
loans to allies. US GDP grew from $36 billion in 1914 to $78 billion in
1919.
The war established the US
as a leading world power, surpassing even the European victor nations.
Wilson’s League of Nations proposal met
overwhelming
opposition in a Republican controlled Congress over a range of
reservations for
various special interests, the most serious being one of national
sovereignty.
The election of 1920 put Republican Warren G.
Harding of Ohio
in the White House whose campaign was couched in soothing generalities.
“America’s
present need,” Harding explained, “is not heroics but healing; not
nostrums but
normalcy; not revolution but restoration.”
The Roaring Twenties
The Roaring Twenties, an era dominated by Republican
presidents: Warren Harding (1920-1923), Calvin Coolidge (1923-1929) and
Herbert
Hoover (1929-1933), saw the decline of progressivism and populism.
Under the
Republican conservative economic philosophy of laissez-faire,
markets
were allowed to operate without government interference. Taxes were
slashed and
regulations lifted dramatically. Monopolies were allowed to
reconstitute, and
inequality of wealth and income reached record levels with government
approval
as needed by capitalism and with public acceptance of an illusion that
any
person, even those untrained in finance, could become a millionaire
through
rampant speculation. The nation’s monetary system was based on the gold
standard,
and the Federal Reserve was limited by the gold in its possession to
significantly increase the money supply in times of financial stress.
These
excesses, fueled by an expansion of credit, moved the US
economy toward the brink of disaster.
Calvin Coolidge, a quintessential New Englander from Vermont, served as the 29th vice president of the United States from 1921 until his succession to the presidency
in 1923 upon
the sudden death of Republican President Warren G. Harding. Coolidge inherited a nation in the
midst of an unprecedented economic boom built on debt-driven
speculation and
handed it over to fellow Republican Herbert Hoover just before it fell
into the
Great Depression. A good Republican, Coolidge faithfully balanced the
Federal
budget, reduced the deficit and presided over the speculative rise of
the stock
market which he mistook as the happy result of free markets. Coolidge
ignored
the needs of the poor and instituted a strict, discriminatory
immigration
policy based on race. “America,” he said proudly, “must be kept American.”
The US
political economy of the past two decades echoed closely the
Harding-Coolidge
decades.
The Coolidge administration
unabashedly
favored big business. He turned the Federal Trade Commission from a
regulatory
agency over corporate monopolistic abuse into one dominated by big
business
that facilitate corporate mergers and acquisition. Western
farmers did
not benefit from the Coolidge prosperity. He twice vetoed (1927,
1928) the McNary-Haugen
Farm Relief Bill, which proposed that the government buy surplus crops
and sell
them abroad in order to raise domestic agricultural prices. Coolidge,
argued
that the government had no business fixing prices. Republican senators
and representatives
from the West formed a coalition with the Democrats against the
president. This
coalition also opposed the Coolidge tax cut for the higher income tax
brackets,
and the tax bills were greatly modified before they were passed. In 1927 Coolidge vetoed a bill to
provide
extra payments to World War I veterans. The next year, he pocket-vetoed
a bill for government operation of the Muscle Shoals hydroelectric
plant in Alabama,
on the Tennessee River to prevent competition
for
private utility companies. Coolidge’s
attitude toward
Muscle Shoals was consistent with his lifelong opposition to the
expansion of
government functions and the interference of the federal government in
private
enterprise.
The presence in his cabinet of
Herbert C.
Hoover and Andrew W. Mellon added to the pro-business tone of his
administration. Coolidge supported the Mellon program of tax cuts and
small
government and encouraged the stock market speculation as in tune with
the
American enterprising spirit. Coolidge’s policies left the nation
unprepared
for the inevitable economic collapse that followed. Coolidge declined
to seek
re-nomination in 1928.
The market crash in 1929 burst the speculative
bubble of the
late 1920s. Hundreds of thousands of uninformed people with no
financial
training were hoping to get rich by speculative with borrowed money
collateralized by the market value of the shares in what appeared to be
a
perpetually rising stock market. By1929, brokers were routinely lending
small
investors with 75% margin, which was outright conservative compared to
the 99%
margin granted to hedge funds and zero down payments for home mortgages
in
years before 2007. The amount of loans outstanding was about the amount
of
currency circulating in the US,
again ultra conservative by current standards.
A Brookings Institute study shows that in 1929 the
top 0.1%
of income recipients had a combined income equal to the bottom 42%.
That same
top 0.1% in 1929 controlled 34% of all savings, meaning a significant
of their
income were unearned from capital gain and dividends, while 80% of the
working
population had no savings at all.
Clinton, the
Populist?
By comparison, Bill Clinton and Al Gore in their
1991
populist campaign for the White House repeatedly pointed out the
obscenity left
by the Reagan administration, of the top 1% of Americans owning 40% of
the
country’s wealth. They also said that if home ownership is not counted
and only
counting businesses, factories and offices, then the top 1% owned 90%
of all
commercial wealth. Unfortunately, once in office, President Clinton did
little
to correct the situation. Clinton
has been described as the best president the Republican would wish for.
After
eight years of George Bush, with home prices falling with no end in
sight, the
top 1% could end up with 99% of the nation’s wealth even when home
ownership is
counted.
Carter Started
Deregulation
Not all could be blamed on the Republicans. Jimmy
Carter
(1977-81) was the president who reversed many of the regulations put in
place
by Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal. See my AToL article Carter
the Granddaddy
of Deregulation. He deregulated airlines, railroads,
trucking, long
distance communication and banks regulation, particularly repealing
Regulation
Q which prohibits banks from paying interest on demand deposit
accounts. The
repeal of Regulation G eventually led to the Savings and Loan crisis In 1980 the Interstate Commerce Commission
still regulated both trucking and the railroads. AT&T (Ma Bell) had
a
nationwide monopoly in which long distance calls were carried via
copper wires,
each with the capacity of 15 calls. Technological innovation in fiber
optic
line allows 2 million calls per
line. The most important long-term effect of transportation is the
uneven
development of the national economy favoring big population centers at
the
expense of rural small towns.
The Carter Administration also gave greater power
to the
Federal Reserve System through the Depository Institutions and Monetary
Control
Act (DIDMCA) of 1980 which otherwise was a necessary first step in
ending the
harmful New Deal restrictions placed upon financial institutions. In
fact, it
would be safe to say that Reagan probably would have taken the
necessary
deregulatory steps had Carter kept all of the regulatory regimes in
place.
Carter made it easier for Reagan to implement
antigovernment
actions. The deregulation movement started under Jimmy Carter was
continued by
Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton. In 2008, calls for new regulation to
rein in
the excesses and abuse of market fundamentalism are hear from all
quarters.
Wealth Disparity Causes
Depression
The Coolidge prosperity of the 1920's was not shared
equitably among all citizens. The disparity of income between the
financial
elite and the average wage earner widened throughout the 1920’s. While
the
disposable income per capita rose 9% from 1920 to 1929, those with
income
within the top 1% enjoyed a stupendous 75% increase from a much higher
base in
per capita disposable income.
In 2006, the CEOs of the 500 biggest US
companies averaged $15.2 million in total annual compensation,
according to
Forbes business magazine’s annual executive pay survey. The top eight
CEOs on
the Forbes list each pocketed over $100 million.
Larry Ellison, CEO of business software giant
Oracle, was
not in the top eight. But as the 11th richest man in the world, who
ended 2006
being worth more than $16 billion, he should not complain on missing
being
among the top ten.
University
of Chicago
economist Austan Goolsbee points out that a CEO like Ellison literally
cannot
spend enough on personal consumption to stop his fortune from growing.
Goolsbee
calculates that Ellison would have to spend over “$183,000 an hour on
things
that can’t be resold for gain, like parties or meals, just to avoid
increasing
his wealth.”
In 2006, Yahoo shares had sunk 35%, or about $20
billion in
market capitalization value. Top talent, according to press reports,
was
jumping ship, not because of low pay but because of loss of confidence
in the
company’s future. A leaked internal Yahoo memo -- known in tech sector
circles
as the “Peanut Butter Manifesto” – said that, like peanut butter on
toast,
Yahoo management was spreading dangerously thin.
Yet Yahoo CEO Terry Semel pocketed $71.7 million in 2006, over twice
the
take-home of any other chief executive in Silicon Valley.
Since 2001, the year he left Hollywood
to take Yahoo’s top slot, Semel has cashed out an additional $450
million in
personal stock option profits.
On the 1920s, a major reason for the large and
growing gap
between the investing rich and wage earners was the increased
manufacturing
output throughout this period. From 1923-1929 the average output per
worker
increased 32% in manufacturing, but average wages for manufacturing
jobs increased
only 8%. From 1923-1929 corporate profits rose 62% and dividends rose
65%. The
created wealth was going mostly to investors rather than workers.
In the 1920s, the Federal government also
contributed to the
growing gap between the investing rich and wage earners. The Revenue
Act of
1926, similar to the 2000 Bush tax cuts, reduced federal income and
inheritance
taxes dramatically. Secretary of the Treasury Andrew Mellon lowered
federal
taxes to enable a taxpayer with a million-dollar annual income to
reduce income
tax from $600,000 to $200,000. Even the Supreme Court played a role in
expanding the gap between the socioeconomic classes. In the 1923 case
of Adkins
v. Children’s Hospital, the Supreme Court ruled minimum-wage
legislation
unconstitutional.
A
2002 study released by Citizens for Tax Justice and the
Children’s Defense Fund reveals that under the Bush tax cut, over the
next ten
years, the top 1% income recipients are slated to
receive tax cuts totaling almost half a trillion dollars. The $477
billion in
tax breaks the Bush administration has targeted to this elite group
will
average $342,000 each over the decade. By 2010, when (and if) the Bush
tax
reductions are fully in place, an astonishing 52% of the total tax cuts
will go
to the richest 1% whose average 2010 income will be $1.5 million. Their
tax-cut
windfall in that year alone will average $85,000 each. Put another way,
of the
estimated $234 billion in tax cuts scheduled for the year 2010, $121
billion
will go just 1.4 million taxpayers.
In the 1920’s, the wide disparity of wealth between
the rich
and the average wage earner increased the vulnerability of the economy.
For an
economy to function with stability on a macro scale, total demand needs
to
equal total supply. Disparity of income eventually will result in
demand
deficiency, causing over supply. The extension of credit to consumers
can
extend the supply/demand imbalance but if credit is extended beyond the
ability
of income to sustain, a debt bubble will result that will inevitably
burst with
economic pain that can only be relieved by inflation.
By the end of the 1920’s, 60% of cars and 80% of
radios were
bought on installment credit. Between 1925 and 1929 the total amount of
outstanding installment credit more than doubled from $1.38 billion to
around
$3 billion while the GDP rose from $91 billion to $104 billion. Today, outstanding consumer credit besides
home mortgages adds up to about $14 trillion, about the same as the
annual GDP.
The US
economy was also reliant upon luxury spending and investment from the
rich to
stay afloat during the 1920's. The problem with this reliance was that
luxury
spending and investment, unlike general consumption on basic needs, can
fluctuate widely based on the wealthy’s confidence in the U.S.
economy. More investment normally increases productivity. However, if
the
rewards of the increased productivity are not distributed fairly to
workers,
production will soon outpace demand. The search for high returns in a
low
demand market will lead to consumer debt bubbles with wide-spread
speculation.
Mass speculation went on throughout the late 1920's. In 1929
alone, a record volume of 1,124,800,410 shares were traded on the New
York
Stock Exchange. From early 1928 to September 1929 the Dow Jones
Industrial Average
rose from 191 to 381. Company earnings became irrelevant as long as
stock
prices continued to rise to yield huge profits for investors. RCA
corporation
stock price leapt from 85 to 420 during 1928, even though it had not
yet paid a
single dividend. The wide spread buying of stocks on margin, investors
could
buy one share of RCA by putting up $10 of his own, and borrowing $75
from his
broker. By selling the stock at $420 a year later, the investor would
turn his
original investment of $10 into $341.25, making a return of over
3,400%.
Populism receded in this frenzy era of speculation because the decline
in wages
had more than offset by speculative profits. The fantasy joy ride came
to an
abrupt end on Black Monday,
October 29, 1929 and revived populism in the US.
Populism in the New Deal had to do with reviving spending by the
average
citizen, shifting from spending by the rich.
This type of speculation was widespread all
through the 1990
and early 2000s. The market melt down that began in August 2007 has
revived
populism in the 2008 presidential election. The
next administration will have to respond
to a new populism to
stimulate rising wages and full employment to shift from luxury
spending to
spending on and by the average citizen. A severe recession will come as
surely
as the sun will set, but it will not be the end of the world. It may,
however,
be the end of the world as we knew it.
Next: The Great
Depression, the New Deal and the 2007 Financial Crisis
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