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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

5 Reasons Why Wall Street's Bailout Won't Work

By Danny Schechter, AlterNet. Posted October 28, 2008.


Markets are volatile and trending down while banks are still not lending despite frequent projections of massive unemployment and stagflation.
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Most Americans know the phrase, “if it ain’t broke don’t fix it.” In the good times, when the economy boomed and Wall Street prospered, it looked like nothing was broke. The free market, we were told, was working like magic insuring prosperity and progress.

But then it happened, out of sight and out of mind, an upward trajectory turned in the other direction. In what was for many an unbelievable chain of events, markets started melting down, banks began writing down portfolios clogged with asset-backed securities that had no assets behind them. Confidence shattered. Suddenly, believers in unregulated transactions realized something was very, very wrong.

Alan Greenspan was “shocked” and said he was wrong to support deregulation of financial markets. As headlines conjured up breadlines and recession, with “something worse” threatening, the government was pressed to act.

Over a year later, after eight interest rate cuts, with one more promised, and the injection of trillions into credit markets and banks worldwide, little has changed. Markets are volatile and trending down while banks are still not lending despite frequent projections of massive unemployment and stagflation.

At the same time, we live in a country that believes that whenever there are problems, there must be solutions. And in the case of the financial crisis, there is no shortage of proposals especially because the whole system—if not capitalism itself—seems at risk. (Even the NY Times ran an editorial on “Rescuing Capitalism.”) This is not a situation that inspires confidence in token reforms and minor adjustments. There seems to be a consensus that this crisis is systemic and structural even as the candidates reduce it all to tax policy.

That hasn’t stopped the government from dipping into its tool bag and throwing everything it has at the problem---bailouts on an unprecedented scale, including, now, of insurance companies and auto lenders There have been pro-business rule changes even partial nationalizations of banks, mortgage companies, and insurance combines.

Together, the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve Bank seem to be fighting on every front. They appear to be giving away money. Is it working?

“Scarcely a day goes by with out some dramatic new initiative,“ writes The New Yorker’s financial columnist James Suriwieki, “even as market chaos makes each new idea soon seem like ancient history.”

Why is that? Surely the people in command are smart, savvy and know the system well. What are they missing? They now know its broke (and many of them are broke too) but they can’t seem to fix it.

Here are five views on what they are getting wrong.

l. THE SYSTEM NEEDS TO COLLAPSE

That’s the view of a perennial bear investor Marc Fabor who “thinks the market was primed for a technical rally” but is not keen on the long-term prospects for the US economy:

“The governments in this world have no other option but to print money. That will lead down the road to inflation,'' Faber said. “You don't need to be an economist graduated from Harvard to know we're already in a recession. They will just put white paint on a crumbling building....
“To rebuild economic health in the United States, you need a serious recession that will last several years,'' he said. “The patient that got drunk on credit growth needs to go into rehabilitation. To give him more alcohol, the way the Fed and the Treasury propose to do, is the wrong medicine.''
2. CONSUMERS ARE NOT SPENDING

Bloomberg reports:
The big concern is that households, spooked by the turmoil in financial markets, will cut back rapidly and sharply, plunging companies into bankruptcy and deepening a recession that many economists say has already begun.
“If we did have a quick cut in spending, it could turn a pretty nasty recession into possibly the worst downturn we've seen in the postwar period,'' says Michael Feroli, a former Federal Reserve official now at JPMorgan Chase & Co.
3. MORAL HAZARD: THEY ARE BAILING OUT THE WRONG PEOPLE

There is something fundamentally wrong in rewarding the people who are responsible for the problem. Worries William Buitner, a financial historian at the London School of Economics, that this will lead to more collapses in the future: “by boosting the incentives for future reckless lending to elephantesquely large financial enterprises.

Unless not only the existing shareholders of the banks benefiting from these capital injections but also the holders of the banks’ unsecured debt (junior and senior) and all other creditors of the bank (with the possible exception of retail depositors up to some appropriate limit) are made to pay a painful penalty for investing in excessively risky if not outright dodgy ventures, we are laying the foundations of the next systemic crisis, even as we are struggling to escape from the current one.”

The bailout was sold deceptively. A New York Times investigation found it was Intended to foster bank consolidation, not loans. Journalist Sam Smith wrote:
Never in the history of the United States has so much public money been spent with so little accounting of where it is right now and where it's going next. Never has so much public money been spent by order of officials who helped to create the crisis the money is supposed to resolve. Never has so much public money been spent by officials for the benefit of so many former colleagues. Never has so much public money been spent with so little explanation by the media. And never has so much public money been spent with so little debate over possible alternatives.
4, FINANCIAL SCAMMERS AND CRIMINALS ARE GOING UNPUNISHED

The FBI announced that it lacks the staff to fully investigate the pervasive crimes on Wall Street.

5. GOOD PEOPLE ARE LEAVING IN DISGUST

Some of the best and the brightest are giving up, rejecting businesses based on flimflams and deceptive marketing. Two years ago, a very successful investor, Andrew Ladhe, started returning money to his investors. “Our entire banking system is a complete disaster,” he wrote. “In my opinion, nearly every major bank would be insolvent if they marked their assets to market.”

In October 2008 he closed his firm all together explaining:
Recently, on the front page of Section C of the Wall Street Journal, a hedge fund manager who was also closing up shop (a $300 million fund), was quoted as saying, “What I have learned about the hedge fund business is that I hate it.” I could not agree more with that statement. I was in this game for the money. The low hanging fruit, i.e. idiots whose parents paid for prep school, Yale, and then the Harvard MBA, was there for the taking. These people who were (often) truly not worthy of the education they received (or supposedly received) rose to the top of companies such as AIG, Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers and all levels of our government. All of this behavior supporting the Aristocracy only ended up making it easier for me to find people stupid enough to take the other side of my trades. God bless America.
These are just five reasons why “the quick fixers” are unlikely to succeed. Notes Harpers, we a need more than tinkering. They call for a fundamental reconstruction at a time when we are also “menaced by dwindling energy supplies and accelerating climate change.”

Also, the Captain Ahabs in charge should admit defeat and step down as was suggested by this comment on a financial website:
Perhaps Bernanke and Greenspan should see if there is an opening for the captain of the Exxon Valdees, job requirements: asleep at the switch.
Still to be answered: can the system be saved from itself?


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See more stories tagged with: bailout, financial crisis

Mediachannel blogger in chief, News Dissector Danny Schechter, is author of PLUNDER: Investigating Our Economic Calamity (Cosimo Books) now available at online book stories. Comments to Dissector@mediachannel.org

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What's needed!
Posted by: Cybershaman on Oct 28, 2008 9:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Better paying jobs!
Every time I hear someone say that people were buying homes above their means, I want to scream,
"No! They bought homes within their means, then they lost the jobs that paid them enough to buy a home and were left with jobs that barely leave you enough to pay for food!"
Their 'means' never went up with the cost of living and actually went down as the money that should have been paid to them for their increasing productivity went to the owner class instead.

We've become a society where BOTH parents have to work full time and even then they can't keep up with the rising cost of healthcare, food, energy, and insurance. By offering the masses cheap toys made by third world wage slaves we kept the illusion of prosperity going for awhile. But those were also cheaply made, break down, and have to be replaced often. Low interest rates impelled people to put these costs off till ... they could bundle these debts into a new refinance of their home and grasp at the straws of their increased equity.

THAT'S where the next scam came in. Low teaser rates to suck them in and balloon payments to force them into a deeper financial hole. Working class Americans are bankrupt, and unless we seriously look at and reverse the wage gap we cannot make this system function as it should. We will only create more bubbles that will eventually burst.

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» Next bubble ...Green Posted by: Sushi
it isn't a 'bailout' in the sense its about economy recovery.
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Oct 28, 2008 10:05 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
its a BAIL OUT because the MONEY WAS STOLEN FOR >8 YEARS.

When they got CAUGHT cheating FOREIGN investors with bogus paper...

...they couldn't payback.

THAT is what the bailout is for: keeping the REST of the globe's investors from sharpening their pencils & advancing on the American economy

...which was UNREGULATED & caused American corruption to eat sound foreign investment strategies & packages.

The US people **allowed** corruption to undermine the GLOBAL economy.

The bailout isn't about the US people, its about keeping the international court of settlements from intervening & repairing the damage out of the asses of rich Americans for causing the problems.

Lemme PUT IT THIS WAY:

the US lost the right to the IMF Presidency appointment.
US surrenders power to appoint World Bank president | Business | The Guardian

Now, ask yourselves, if the US gov't owes money to THE WORLD of their creditors... does the US gov't STILL CONTROL its FOREIGN & DOMESTIC POLICIES?

you tell me...
would you if investors owned your assets?

Does the US control their domestic & foreign policies?: "Moody's: U.S. rating could be pressured in long term"

"Basel II comes knocking: "IMF finally knocks on Uncle Sam's door"

Basel II: "How New Global Banking Rules Could Deepen the U.S. Crisis" by Peter Coy, BusinessWeek

"There is no 'WE' in corruption"

-Start Talking Free Trade Deal with India: CEOs - Embassy Magazine - g*d help us...
-yen carry trade? & Affluenza: Loonie falls again as new credit problem emerges
-“White Trash, Fast Food” - War for Wealth: special edition Der Spiegel
-Economic Impact of Enron... & the potential impact of SEC on the Working Family & World Economy


Spread Love, not corporate dependence...

BlueBerry Pick'n
can be found @
ThisCanadian
~~~
"... tolerance of intolerance is cowardice..." ~ Ayaan Hirsi Ali.
"We, two, form a Multitude" ~ Ovid.
"Violence can only be concealed by a Lie, & the Lie can only be maintained by Violence." ... "Any man, who has once proclaimed Violence as his Method, is inevitably forced to take the Lie as his Principle" – Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
~~~
"Silent Freedom is Freedom Silenced"

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» Globalists control the US Posted by: Iconoclast421
dwindling energy supplies
Posted by: Iconoclast421 on Oct 28, 2008 10:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are two sides to that coin. We're still at the peak of world oil production. A lot of work can be done with all that energy now that less and less is being wasted on SUVs and plastic factories.

Demand is falling much faster than supply. This means that if there are any extremely energy intensive tasks the country might want to undertake, now is the time to do it.

All these financial problems are ultimately a result of inefficient investment.

By inefficient I mean inefficient return on investment. For example, take 3 homebuilders who all are building new $200,000 homes. Each builder is adding $30,000 worth of extras to the standard cardboard cutout home design common to all three. One is adding a nice swimming pool & jacuzzi. Another is adding an elaborate stone landscaping job. The third builder is adding a solar panel installation. Now which of these three offers the best return on investment? Without a doubt, the solar panels do. That should be obvious.

However, strange things happen in the marketplace. For example, in 10 years, the home with the swimming pool might be worth $10,000 more than the home with the solar panels. Why? Only because people are willing to pay more for the swimming pool. Energy return on investment (EROI) doesnt concern most people. It doesnt matter that you can buy a windmill and super high quality insulation for the same price as some silly landscaping job. That attitude has to change on an individual level. But the government needs to create the preconditions necessary to allow high EROI jobs to be created.

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» RE: dwindling energy supplies Posted by: Russianrocket
Better than most
Posted by: Russianrocket on Oct 28, 2008 10:20 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Finally an article on Alternet that has some baring on fact. There are some statements in here I would take issue with but, you seem to have hit the nail on the head with the statement that Americans expect clean solutions to their problems. Whenever something goes wrong, everyone expects a Disney ending.

While there are a slew of problems with the bailout, it seems to be the best thing going. A lot of very smart people are scratching their heads trying to think up the best solution. Equity injections seem to be the best bet. A lot of investors, both in stocks and bonds, are already feeling the pain. Look at how the financial stocks are doing and check out the ridiculous bond yields on companies like Citigroup. Plenty of people have already been hit, so I am not too worried about moral hazard. We are way past this point.

The fact of the matter is we are destined for a recession. The system is flawed, but letting our banking system fail would be far worse for the economy. Just imagine what would happen to consumer spending in that case... The main flaw in our economy really stems from our current account deficit. For about 30 years, we have been consuming more than we produce and its catching up with us now. It's going to take a massive recession to correct this, and it seems like that's what we're in store for. No easy solutions.

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» RE: Better than most Posted by: tommy_slothrop
FBI
Posted by: JSquercia on Oct 28, 2008 10:36 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We are told that the FBI doesn't have the people to Investigate Wall Street GIVE A ME BREAK . They have people who can investigate ACORN but NOT the lirds of Wall Street . It isn't personel that is the problen it is the WILL

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Sometimes lunatics have the best solution
Posted by: ReallyBearish on Oct 28, 2008 10:44 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is actually a quote from Lyndon LaRouche:

"This is what is causing the panic at the London hedge fund conference, as well it should. Bigger bailouts won't help, but will in fact only make the problem worse. The only solution is to shut the derivatives markets down completely, declaring all derivatives transactions null and void, and thereby eliminating all claims. The speculators reject this approach--when the solution is a flea dip, the fleas will never accept the solution--but we must clean up the mess these parasites have made, and that begins with shutting them down. They have failed, their system has failed, and it is past time to admit that, and let the adults take over. It is the only sane path."

The guy is as nutty as a fruitcake, but this seems to me to be the simplest and best solution to the whole fiancial mess.

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Finally!
Posted by: wjfaust on Oct 28, 2008 1:13 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Good article. Finally, someone is talking about the systemic problems--the deep problems that can't be touched by the solutions proposed from within.

I would make two other points: First, it has little to do with incompetence and larceny in high places. People will behave selfishly in whatever way the "system" allows. Without appropriate constraints, what happened will happen again. That cries out for reregulation.

Second, as is rarely pointed out elsewhere, this article identifies a larger context: peak oil and climate change. These unaddressed issues suggest even reregulation is just a bandage to stop the hemorrhaging. That larger context will demand we abandon our commitment to structural hyper-consumption and an ever-growing economy on a finite planet teetering on the brink of collapse from human insult. The alternative economy must work within the constraints of our planet. This one clearly does not.

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It's Not that the Banks Don't Have Money
Posted by: websmith on Oct 28, 2008 1:38 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In a healthy economy, banks create loans from deposits made by the population.

This is significant in that it demonstrates that the population has the money to buy goods and services. Because goods and services are being purchased, banks are willing to loan businesses money.

When too much of the population's money is taken to pay interest, less goods and services are purchased, businesses sell less, and banks are less willing to loan them money. Of, course, this downward spiral continues until the disaster becomes evident when the pain trickles up.

No amount of money thrown at the banks is going to fix this. The population has to recover first.

http://ewebsmith.com/Finance/hiddendemon.html

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Fundamental Restructuring of Financial Markets
Posted by: foius on Oct 28, 2008 3:01 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mr. Scherer's article on the relative failure of the "Wall Street Bailout" is right on the money. Furthermore, our elected officials apparently believe that the American public is no more than a flock of sheep needing to be led to the bailout slaughterhouse by the "Wall Street Wolves". Unless, and until the average American middle-class worker realizes that there will be no support system for them when the financial burdens are too great for them to bear, we will continually give tacit approval to the ridiculous programs that emanate from Congress for the benefit of "Big Business". With no hope of true fundamental reform, and I mean a change in the way that capitalism functions in our economy, there will only be more meltdowns in more industries as the economy sputters from a lack of any manufacturing based job support and expansion. Without some type of jobs based expansion being underwritten by the Federal Government (everything else seems to be underwritten by the Feds, why not decent paying jobs), there will be cyclical recessionary trends that will feed off the lack of any economic recovery in the short-term. If we must underwrite massive debt, let it be for the American consumer's purchases and economic solvency.

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Top “Reason” is FASCISM (others are effects not “reasons”)
Posted by: Mister_PsyOps on Oct 28, 2008 4:18 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sorry to point this out yet again. But the above would be another red herring article on the cause of this latest planned crash and systemic meltdown.

All 5 reasons presented in the Alternet article have ZERO to do with core causes for the global crash. Put another way, every “reason” listed for why the bailout happened let alone will not work are decoys. That includes #3 which is a clue to what happened but NOT a reason.

The actual reason is that we live under a de facto Fascist system disguised as phony democracy under equally phony “capitalism”. (“capitalism” requires genuine free markets with real competition of industry and thought as well as democracy to exist - we have NONE)

This begins with an economy rigged by a private Ponzi scheme “Federal Reserve” Corp (not federal, less than NO reserves at all) Fascist bank created to enrich the robber baron ruling class that created it at a 1910 secret summit on Jekyll Island (later enacted into law by KKK racist puppet president Woodrow Wilson in 1913).

Utterly bogus 9/11 “war on terror” of a thousand lies into a martial law bailout for Organized Corporate Crime Rule is obvious Fascism—defined as the merger of state and corporate power with freeloading corporate power in command.

Clue: knighted by corrupt “nobility” out of England, Sir Alan “Bubble” Greenspan’s doctoral thesis was on housing bubbles. Hank Paulson as CEO of Goldman Sachs pushed the scam derivatives business as a top priority along with all the usual corporate crime suspects.

Anyone who takes a premeditated global Wall Street meltdown of this size as some random incident is gullible to the point of masochism.

Bottom Line? Rewarding parasite thieves and mass murderers only happens under Fascism with concentration of power in the wrong hands is always the game plan despite whatever stooge play-actor (Obama, McCain, etc, etc) pretends to be in charge.

Depend on it.



“What we have found over the years in the marketplace is that derivatives have been an extraordinarily useful vehicle to transfer risk from those who shouldn’t be taking it to those who are willing to and are capable of doing so…We think it would be a mistake to more deeply regulate.”
Alan Greespan (before the Senate Banking Committee 2003)

“Our financial institutions are in a strong financial position, and our economic fundamentals are healthy…”
Hank Paulson (IMF meeting 10/20/07)

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Since America has became an consumer nation....
Posted by: eosrk on Oct 28, 2008 4:46 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...the gov't must not have read that chapter in the book; if you want the money to keep going, regular people need good-paying jobs to keep it up......so, BushCo...it actually started under Regan the Unionbuster.....and this is the end result...

Et Tu, Greenspan.

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Is it;
Posted by: richholland on Oct 28, 2008 8:03 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
maybe some people in the USA must think wether or not it is ETHICAL correct and healthy to make profit out the production of Weapons??

Could this lead to wars??
If you have public transportation, prisons, health care etc. working at break even maybe you could use the money for good salaries for the families instead big bonuses for the CEO.

Without rethinking about values USA never can come out of the recession...

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travelergtoo
Posted by: travelertoo on Oct 28, 2008 9:33 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bush bails out his Harvard buddies!!!!!!!!!!!!

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after McCain steals the election, we need Bill C.
Posted by: Ruth_Calabria on Oct 29, 2008 10:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dear Bill:

Check out the video CBS NEWS video that shows me talking about you in Fayetteville, WV, during the primary. More than half a million people viewed it. I'm the woman who heckled you while you were speaking. After that day, I and my whole family switched from Obama to Hillary and we stayed with her all the way to the end. We wish she were the nominee as we feel that Obama is going to lose it yet.

I said, "Hey, Bill, it's guns or butter."

You paused and kept on with your speech.

"Stop the War!"

You paused and kept on with your speech.

I said, "Hillary promised health care and then she went into the White House and didn't come out to fight for health care."

You stopped and started shouting in her defense, saying that Bob Doyle blocked health care.

I said, "You were the President!"

You said, "I'll talk to you later."

Afterwards I and my husband went forward to shake your hand and gave you one of our leaflets urging you to check out our website, www.matrix-evolutions.com .

I hope you will after the election and McCain wins because I feel that you and Hillary might fight this abomination even though Obama won't. Please, we need you.

Ruth Calabria

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New Bretton Woods ...
Posted by: login@bugmenot.com on Oct 31, 2008 9:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
is exactly what we need, and Lyndon LaRouche knows how to get it!

http://www.larouchepub.com/other /2008/3542suicide_or_nbw.html


this guy is a freakin genius. chekkitout.

(dont forget to copy paste, and then get rid of the space between "other" and "/2008" to activate the link... alternet is too stupid to understand big words...

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