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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

Financial Weapons of Mass Destruction

By Sean Gonsalves, AlterNet. Posted September 22, 2008.


Free market ideology comes down to socialism for the rich, capitalism for everybody else.
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First, the U.S. Treasury nationalized Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which holds over $5 trillion in combined assets and guarantees most of the mortgages in the country -- an implicit acknowledgement by the government that the mortgage market is broken.

We've overthrown regimes and threatened others with military action for nationalizing industries. When other governments do it, it's evidence of their evil, socialist heart. When our government does it, it's necessary.

Next came Lehman Brothers filing the largest bankruptcy in U.S. history. Then, the following day, the Federal Reserve gave an $85 billion "bridge loan" to A.I.G., the largest insurance company on the planet, holding over $1 trillion in assets with 100,000 employees across the globe.

What we are witnessing is what economists Douglas Diamond and Anil Kashyap call "the most remarkable period of government intervention into the financial system since the Great Depression."

At the heart of this credit crunch mess is something called "derivatives." The Initiative for Policy Dialogue at Columbia University offers a good primer:

A derivative is a financial contract whose value is linked to the price of an underlying commodity, asset, rate, index or the occurrence or magnitude of an event. The term derivative refers to how the price of these contracts is derived from the price the underlying item.

It's kinda like playing craps at the casino, where instead of gamblers betting on the dice-roller to crap-out, with derivatives, investors are betting on whether a creditor is going to go under. But instead of buying chips, the lender buys risk-insurance and makes a "swap" with a third-party. If the borrower doesn't pay the loan back, the lender loses the loan but collects the insurance.

To make things even more confusing, there are different kinds of derivatives. Futures. Forwards. Swaps. Options.

Ever since Mesopotamians were writing on clay-tablets, derivatives have played a useful role. But, IPD cautions, "they also pose several dangers to the stability of financial markets and the overall economy" because they can be used "for unproductive purposes such as avoiding taxation, outflanking regulations designed to make financial markets safe and sound, and manipulating accounting rules, credit ratings and financial reports. Derivatives are also used to commit fraud and to manipulate markets."

I guess that's why Warren Buffet (in 2002, mind you), said derivatives were a "financial weapon of mass destruction." He was ridiculed at the time but now even John McCain is suggesting that people like Buffet and others tell us how to regulate the market.

According to Marketwatch, the derivatives market is somewhere around $500 trillion. No, that's not a typo. That's trillion.

To put it in perspective, Marketwatch reminds us that the U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) is about $15 trillion. The GDP of all nations combined is approximately $50 trillion. The total value of all the real estate in the world is estimated at $75 trillion and the total value of all the world's stocks and bonds is about $100 trillion. But there's a $500 trillion market in derivatives!

If you find this all confusing, we're in good company. Because, " ... what we are witnessing is essentially the breakdown of our modern-day banking system, a complex of leveraged lending so hard to understand that Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke required a face-to-face refresher course from hedge fund managers in mid August," Bond fund giant Bill Gross told Marketwatch.

Marketwatch goes on to observe: "In short, not only Warren Buffett, but Gross, Bernanke, the Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and the rest of America's leaders can't 'figure out' the world's $516 trillion derivatives."

That's because we're talking about a "shadow banking system," in which derivatives are not just risk management tools but "a new way of creating money outside the normal central bank liquidity rules. How? Because they're private contracts between two companies or institutions."

Deregulation? Cutting taxes on the super rich? Arguing that government "hand-outs" are a "moral hazard" leading to "dependency" and welfare queendom? All of this unregulated free-market ideology that has dominated American politics and the GOP since the Reagan revolution has brought the country to its financial knees.

Could it be that in this prostrate position, enough people will recognize that the unregulated free-market myth is dead? With Wall Street being handed a government bailout by an administration that regards laissez-faire capitalism as a divine elixir, the economic reality is: socialism for the rich; capitalism for everybody else. "Compassionate conservatism" for the wealthy. "Market discipline" for the poor.

Digg!

See more stories tagged with: capitalism, wall street, free market, bailout, finance industry, derivatives

Sean Gonsalves is a syndicated columnist and news editor with the Cape Cod Times.


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Noe we KNOW
Posted by: JSquercia on Sep 22, 2008 1:01 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now we KNOW what Bush was referring to when talked about being a Compassionite Conservative

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You're not the only one who keeps thinking of casinos
Posted by: hagwind on Sep 22, 2008 7:28 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What I understand about derivatives is that they're several steps away from anything I recognize as real, and that huge power accrues to anyone who can manipulate them successfully. What they are manipulating isn't just derivatives; it's companies, currencies, countries, and human beings.

If human beings want to bus off to Foxwoods and blow all their money there, I really don't mind, though I do wish they'd donate that money to Obama or NPR or Moveon.org or AlterNet or something. But these rich sociopaths dicing with people's lives ought to be in jail, or in rehab, or in hell.

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It’s “Socialism” for Parasites and FASCISM for Everyone Else
Posted by: Mister_PsyOps on Sep 25, 2008 12:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Whatever you might think of “Free Markets” or “capitalism” they DO NOT EXIST under Organized Corporate Monopoly Fascist rule . By definition “capitalism” does not happen and cannot happen under Fascism. Ever.

The MSM and robber baron foundation supported universities saying “capitalism” is to blame is as naked a red herring decoy as they come

And there is nothing “implicit” about the mortgage market being broken when the entire global economy has been torn apart by a derivatives bubble that is north of $1, 280 QUADRILLION dollars (well over $1,280 TRILLIONS) where a 10% write-down would bankrupt the entire planet overnight.

The planet is below broke and it’s gotten that way by and for Fascists who have pillaged their way to power and now want Americans to pay for it.

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» clarification on "socialism" Posted by: wefearwhatwedontunderstand
Domestic Terrorists- those Who Brazenly destroy Economies
Posted by: Purple Girl on Sep 25, 2008 7:31 AM   
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Are you all Beginning to see exactly WHO "hates America and Our way of Life", their initials are not AQ, they are INC.
So as Rachal Says "someBody Talk me down"
How is it a guy in GA is facing th eDeath penality for killing a Cop even though they have no direct evidence- no finger prints, no reliable witness and No DNA???
YET
AnAdmin who was forewarned about poss attacks, but did nothing: A Sen Who beared False Witness regarding the Anthrax 'attacks and has spent his entire Political career working for the Banking Casino- already caused One Huge Billion dollar Bailout 20 yrs ago Assisted in the denial of all our citizens Constutional and Bill of Rights Birthrights......List to long to complete- Ultimately causing mass devastation to the country and the World, and It's People- Are NOT Facing the Same Sentence?!?
Screw Impeachment I want them sentence to Death for Treason, War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity.
In fact in the name of Energy conservation- lets pardon all those on death row now so we can save the 'Juice' for the numerous High crimes Criminals we'll need to get rid of from this admin and the Corp Sponsors.
Hell we could run their Trials like 'American Idol' at the end of each episode each contestant is sent 'Home' as The Parting gift!

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Let the Free Market do its work.
Posted by: Artkansas on Sep 25, 2008 7:53 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No rewards for bad boys. If the market works in good times, it works in bad times. Let the chips fall and I bet you'd be surprised at how well things rebound. It's all those big fees we are paying to keep the status quo for the rich folks that will gum up the works financially.

Are they gonna pay down the national debt? Not hardly.

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CommonDreamer
Posted by: CommonDreamer on Oct 6, 2008 6:42 PM   
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What a great article. Yes we have suffered at the hand of supply side sophistry for years now and finally it's fallen in like a bad souffle. It has no center - nothing to hold it up (this means rising wages and a strong middle and under class). Instead it's smoke and mirrors and garbage about how enriching the top always works. Not only did we have egregious and wasteful tax cuts, they couldn't stop there - had to take all of the money (CEO salaries and options)...then with that they run up the prices of everything far beyond what they're worth (housing, education, commodities)...at the same time offering usury credit in lieu of rising wages. Could there be a better recipe for economic disaster? Not if you tried.

Let's just hope this kills supply side for good. It was not enough that we supported the wealthy nanny state with our depressed wages and credit borrowings and buying at outrageous prices...now they want us to bail them out too. Absolutely outrageous. Progressivity is the only reasonable thing left in the fascist state. We can't hold this election soon enough.

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What's with the term "socialism for the rich"?
Posted by: Hans B on Oct 10, 2008 5:22 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't get why in the US socialism is equated with government aid. Socialism is redistribution of wealth downwards, not upwards, and not necessarily through tax and spend. Taxing the poor to benefit the rich is the opposite of socialism. The terms aristocracy or feudalism - systems where government power is indeed used to transfer wealth upwards - seem more appropriate.

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