Home
Archive
Columnists
Video
Blogs
Discuss
About
Search
Donate
Advertise
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Register to Vote: Rock the Vote, powered by Working Assets Wireless
Advertisement
  • AlterNetYour turn

Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.


Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.

Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

The Fed, The Enabler

By Robert Kuttner, Boston Globe. Posted September 24, 2007.


For more than two decades, the Federal Reserve has been prime enabler of a dangerously speculative economy.
Advertisement

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, like Alan Greenspan before him, has acted to keep a credit crunch from turning into a depression. The stock market liked the Fed's half-point rate cut, and experts have generally praised Bernanke's determination to do whatever it takes to contain the crisis.

But the turbulence is far from over, and in a sense the Fed is cleaning up its own mess. For more than two decades, the Federal Reserve has been prime enabler of a dangerously speculative economy. If we dodge this bullet without addressing the deeper threats, there will be more bullets to come.

Here's the basic problem: Since the late 1970s, financial institutions have invented exotic ways of extending credit and taking big speculative risks. For example, bonds backed by packages of mortgages are not like traditional bank loans. In a crisis, their value can plummet. Likewise the other derivative instruments heavily traded by hedge funds.

In the old days, bank examiners could look at a bank's portfolio of loans, assign a precise degree of risk, and require banks to hold adequate reserves against losses. Today, much of what banks hold is a financial black box. Nobody knows what this paper is really worth. And just as all this risky innovation was proliferating, Congress made matters worse by deregulating much of the banking sector, reflecting the prevailing view that financial markets could regulate themselves. Up with markets, down with government!

The Federal Reserve, however, is part of the government. And every time one of these new financial fads blows up on its sponsors, in rushes the Fed to countermand the market's verdict -because of the larger risks to the economy.

When banks lost billions on Third World loans in the 1980s, the Fed came to their rescue. When Citibank was under water in 1990, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York personally undertook a secret mission to persuade a Saudi prince to pump in billions in capital as a passive investor. Sure sounds like government intervention to me.

In 1998, the Fed virtually ordered the banks to bail out a big hedge fund that went bust, Long Term Capital Management. And even though Greenspan had expressed worry that "irrational exuberance" was creating a stock market bubble, big losses by banks in currency speculation in East Asia and Russia led Greenspan to keep cutting rates, despite his foreboding that cheaper money would just pump up markets and invite more speculation.

So the Wall Street wiseguys have a very nice game going. When things are booming, they warn government not to spoil the party. But in a bust, they can count on the Fed to rescue them with emergency infusions of cash and cheaper interest rates.

The point is not that the Fed should let the whole economy collapse in order to teach speculators a lesson. The Fed also needs to remember its other role -- as regulator.

Greenspan, however, disdained regulation, insisting that derivatives required no government intervention. The jury is still out on Bernanke. He testified Thursday that the mortgage sector needed stronger guidelines, but backed away from embracing more regulation generally.

The Fed's record on this front is terrible. Congress, anticipating mortgage problems, passed legislation back in 1994, requiring the Fed to regulate loan standards for all mortgage creditors, including the otherwise unregulated companies that brought us the subprime crisis. Yet for 13 years, the Fed stonewalled. Not until July, when the crisis was full blown, did the Fed reluctantly promise regulations by year-end.

The subprime explosion is a simple case of regulatory failure. There is little monitoring of the mortgage companies that originated the bait-and-switch loans, the investment companies that turned them into bonds, the private rating agencies that gave the bonds overly optimistic ratings, and the hedge funds that bought them.

And subprime loans occupy just one slice of the risky plays now endemic on Wall Street. Yet commercial banks, the regulated cornerstone of our monetary system, finance all these transactions, putting bank balance sheets and the whole economy at risk.

Commentators mistakenly debate whether Bernanke cut rates too much or not enough. That one-dimensional argument misses the point. We surely need lower rates to get through the immediate crunch, but it's not smart to bail out speculators with cheap money unless the Fed also acts as regulator to prevent the next crisis.

AlterNet is making this material available in accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107: This article is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.

Digg!

See more stories tagged with: housing bubble, sub-prime, lending crisis, fed

Robert Kuttner is co-editor of The American Prospect.



Advertisement

 

Comments Turn comments off sitewide Give us feedback »
Comments closed.
The comments for this story have been closed. Thank you to everyone who participated.
View:
Kuttner's right. The FED abdicated its role as chief regulator to support Wall St. fearing collapse.
Posted by: yellow on Sep 24, 2007 2:50 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The FED has supported Wall Street's speculative binges. But the story doesn't begin with the FED but rather with the shifts in the US economy which began to stagnate as the result of a global overproduction of consumer durables in the early 1970s. Endemic stagnation has been a chronic feature of US capitalism ever since. Wall Street's answer has been increasing financialization of the US economy.

Since the business cycle peak of late 1973, there has been a dearth of productive investment in the US domestic economy. Foreign direct investment, like that from Japanese auto makers, has used labor saving technology contributing little to overall US employment. Beginning with the 1975 upswing in the US economy, US manufacturers began in earnest to offshore high paying jobs in search of cheap labor and lower unit production costs. Steel production and the rate of increase of auto sales went way down by the late 1970s despite increases in the GNP. This was because the productive base of the US economy was shifting overseas and being replaced by services and FIRE (finance, insurance, real estate) as power shifted from the industrial fraction of the US ruling class to the finance capital. Congressional deregulation of banking led to a casino economy where speculation became rampant. The growth of US household debt to GDP is one indicator of US financialization. Between 1978 and 2004, the ratio of US household debt to GDP doubled from around 45% to 90%.

Tax cuts provided the liquidity for much financial speculation. According to the OMB, corporate income tax went from nearly 27% of the federal tax structure in 1955 to about 10% in 1995. Currently it is less than 7%. Much of the tax savings went to Wall Street. The overcapacity in intermediate goods industries like Steel gave incentive for corporations to shrink capacity and boost prices through mega-mergers. The tax cuts have financed such M&A activity which itself generated more financial activity. Speculation on securitized mortgage debts, rather than expanded industrial capacity which has averaged around 80% since 1973, was a further development.

The end of the three decades long prosperity from 1945 to 1973 has led to increasing financialization amidst stagnation. Debt driven growth has been the basic dynamic of US capitalism since the beginning of the 1975-6 recovery. The Volcker/Reagan recession crushed inflation with 21.5% interest rates as it continued the pace of financialization. Interest rates declined to 11.5% where they stayed long after inflation had come down drawing in foreign investment to prop up the US dollar encouraging imports. This also encouraged continued foreign borrowing to pay for imports, much of it from US overseas subsidiaries, and a growing balance of payments deficit.

One consequence has been the worsening distribution of income. The share of pre-tax income of the top 1% of the US income scale has gone from about 9% in 1973 to over 21% currently. This is closely related the destruction of unions, and the downward pressure on wages applied by the offshoring of jobs overseas.

The FED didn't create financialization but it enables it for fear of a depression. It fears consumer default and a collapse on Wall Street similar to that which occured in 1929 so it won't raise interest rates or reserve requirements. Housing and equity bubbles continue to drive the economy. Wall St. chose this strategy as the strength of finance capital eclipsed that of industrial capital in the mid-1970s.

A new agenda to restore the US middle class begins by regulating the markets. It also requires a government spending program to create productive work in new sectors like mass transit, renewable energy, affordable housing, and restoring the crumbling infrastructure. This would reorient the US economy to meet human needs rather than corporate greed, inequality and financial risk.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

federal reserve, purveyor & protector of "disaster capitalism"
Posted by: vzn on Sep 24, 2007 8:44 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
federal reserve is nothing but a smokescreen for
sophisticated, veiled parasitism of the capital class
vs the labor class. but the propaganda is quite effective,
and the labor class has no problem with it, only dimly aware
of its true purpose.

"none are more enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free" --goethe

all the gory details in a paper I wrote called


"fractional reserve banking as economic parasitism"


endorsed by two phd economists. printed in nexus
magazine, 60k world circulation. #1 top downloaded
economics paper. used by economics
teacher in australia as standard classroom material.

more info on request.


recent supporting material:



The Shock Doctrine: Naomi Klein on the Rise of Disaster Capitalism


Confessions of an Economic Hit Man: How the U.S. Uses Globalization to Cheat Poor Countries Out of Trillions


John Perkins on "The Secret History of the American Empire: Economic Hit Men, Jackals, and the Truth about Global Corruption"


Video, senator/pres candidate Dennis Kucinich at last years 2005 Monetary Reform Conference

money as debt video by Grignon

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Kuttner does not tell the truth.....
Posted by: ChrisBieber on Sep 24, 2007 9:08 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
College graduate Kuttner blithely declares: "...The Federal Reserve, however, is part of the government."

All you have to do is ask for a reply from a Fed Bank and you will notice that it(whatever) DOES NOT HAVE FRANKING ie free mail AS DO ALL GOVERNMENT AGENCIES.

A little bit of history that is available on google! shows that the Fed is as "Federal" as Federal Express ie a PRIVATE corporation.

All Congress did in 1913(on Dec 23 while most of the House and Senate were home for Christmas...only 5 House members bothered to vote against it..including Charles Lindbergh Sr...who said "the US will rue the day when it adopted a central bank" and that "inflation will now be scientifically created") was to GRANT A MONOPOLY on a coterie of THE ELITE NY BANKS...ie Morgan/Rockefeller/Kuhn Loeb and Co et al...

it is NOT public...it has 3 Classes of shareholders...and the first class A's have been sealed and not revealed...

As the logical OTHER side of the "coin" HA! being the 17th Amendment, the Income Tax, all the Socialist Schemes of a Self Perpetuating and Monolithic Central Govt and the means and werewithal to "pay" for it were enacted in the same year.

A printing press FIAT currency and a UNENUMERATED tax on incomes... just HOW did America become the richest and most productive and most free country on Earth WITHOUT A CENTRAL BANK OR AN INCOME TAX???

That sound of silence..the sound of....Mr Kuttner and his ilk..AND MOST OF AMERICANS...utter ignorance of history and currency and freedom....when asked that question.

2 last questions and a couple of suggestions..

What is the 2nd Plank of SOCIALIST Karl Marx's Communist Manifesto?

What is the 5th Plank of SOCIALIST Karl Marx's Communist Manifesto???

ah.....AN INCOME TAX......AND A CENTRAL BANK....

gee...whose IDEAS! won the Cold War????

PS the 10th Plank to SOCIALIZE A NATION WAS...

gee...PUBLIC EDUCATION.... that word "education"....just how many times is it MENTIONED in the Bill of Rights....or even the Constitution????

HINT: as many times as the word "education" appears...


Anyway...the point is that the deliberate deception and Orwellian manipulation of the language and the dummification of Americans has left our country to the megalomaniacs and socialists....with thier proven track record...of the 20th Century...and the killings and war and devastation and tyranny..

ONLY ONE CANDIDATE FOR PRESIDENT THIS YEAR HAS CHALLENGED THE STATUS QUO AND TOLD THE TRUTH AND WHAT TO DO ABOUT IT.

and that is Congressman Ron Paul.

Visit his campaign site and view some of his speeches on the HIDDEN TAX of inflation and the dark wizards at the Fed and their runamock printing press money and plans. If elected he will ask Congress to REVOKE the Federal Reserve Act and go back to what the Constitution said about the Dollar and get the Banksters out of our money.

it is at http://www.ronpaul2008.com

time is running out...the queues in London of the bank run are TIP of the ICEBERG here.....

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

YELLOW IS VERY WRONG.. I HAVE A DBA AND KNOW THAT THE FED IS UNCONSTITUTIONAL
Posted by: poppop_schell on Sep 29, 2007 4:06 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Only Ron Paul has promised to eliminate the FED. He is the ONLY one with the courage to say this in the recent FED hearings. I am running for NC's 12th Congresional District to help Ron Paul eliminate the FED.

http://www.ronpaul2008.com
http://www.schellforcongress.com

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Fed is not government
Posted by: uncleeddie on Oct 2, 2007 2:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is always important to remember that the FED is NOT a government agency or subject to Government regulations. It is a PRIVATE group I'm sure of pretty well off people. The fact that the U.S. government works for the fed confuses people because they believe the government at any level is suppose to represent their wishes not a group of bankers. Well the truth is in the reaction to when people are feeling pain and when big business or rich speculators feel pain. When the former is in trouble we hear all about free enterprise and the independent markets and how government should keep a distance. However when the markets start to fall, when the dollar nosedives, when big business is in a panic suddenly nothing matters than the government stepping in to help the rich and save the day. Hypocrisy could be interchanged with the Ben Bernanke or Alan Greenspan definition of the term capitalism.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]