Not a bad idea.   If it can't be competitive then nationalize and reorganize
it in a way in which it can be - however - what if competition just spurs
the waste of precious resources like water for example?   It would be more
competitive to ruin the water with fracking and then corner Poland Spring or
some other source of uncontaminated water.     Break the windows and leave
your card to fix windows or better still, give people a cold and underbid
the local hospital at fixing the virus.   Maybe there is something just
plain wrong here.   Anyway here's the article. 


 


REH


 


Wall Street Is Too Big to Regulate


By GAR ALPEROVITZ


Published: July 22, 2012, NYTimes OpEd


 

THE Barclays interest-rate scandal, HSBC's openness to money laundering by
Mexican drug traffickers, the epic blunders at JPMorgan Chase - at this
point, four years after Wall Street wrecked the global economy, does anyone
really believe we can regulate the big banks? And if we broke them up, would
they really stay broken up?

Most liberals in Washington - President Obama included - keep hoping the
banks can be more tightly controlled but otherwise left as is. That's the
theory behind the two-year-old Dodd-Frank law, which Republicans and Wall
Street are still working to eviscerate.

Some economists in and around the
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/u/univers
ity_of_chicago/index.html?inline=nyt-org> University of Chicago, who founded
the modern conservative tradition, had a surprisingly different take: When
it comes to the really big fish in the economic pond, some felt, the only
way to preserve competition was to
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/n/nationalizat
ion_of_industry/banks/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier> nationalize the
largest ones, which defied regulation.

This notion seems counterintuitive: after all, the school's founders
provided the intellectual framework for the laissez-faire turn against
market regulation over the last half-century. But for them, "bigness" and
competition could easily become mutually exclusive. One of the most
important
<http://www.law.uchicago.edu/alumni/magazine/fall11/lawandecon-history>
Chicago School leaders, Henry C. Simons, judged in 1934 that "the
corporation is simply running away with our economic (and political)
system."

Simons (a hero of the libertarian idol Milton Friedman) was skeptical of
enormity. "Few of our gigantic corporations," he wrote, "can be defended on
the ground that their present size is necessary to reasonably full
exploitation of production economies."

The central problem, then as now, was that very large corporations could
easily undermine regulatory and antitrust strategies. The Nobel laureate
George J. Stigler demonstrated how regulation was commonly "designed and
operated primarily for" the benefit of the industries involved. And numerous
conservatives, including Simons, concluded that large corporate players
could thwart antitrust "break-them-up" efforts - a view Friedman
<http://www.cato.org/pubs/policy_report/v21n2/friedman.html> came to share.

Simons did not shrink from the obvious conclusion: "Every industry should be
either effectively competitive or socialized." If other remedies were
unworkable, "The state should face the necessity of actually taking over,
owning, and managing directly" all "industries in which it is impossible to
maintain effectively competitive conditions."

At the height of the Depression, eight major economists (including Frank H.
Knight) put forward a "Chicago Plan" that called for outright ownership of
Federal Reserve Banks, the nationalization of money creation, and the
transformation of banks into highly restricted savings-and-loan-like
institutions.

To be sure, Simons later revised some of his views, and in the main he and
others weren't focused on financial crises. After all, in the mid-20th
century, banks were far less concentrated than they are today, when the five
biggest - JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup, Wells Fargo and
Goldman Sachs - dominate the industry, with combined assets amounting to
more than half of the nation's economy.

It's also true that not all Chicago School economists (not to mention their
descendants) agreed with Simons, especially on the controversial issue of
nationalization. But the logic of his argument remains: With high-paid
lobbyists contesting every proposed regulation, it is increasingly clear
that big banks can never be effectively controlled as private businesses. If
an enterprise (or five of them) is so large and so concentrated that
competition and regulation are impossible, the most market-friendly step is
to nationalize its functions.

What about breaking up the banks, as many on the left favor? Recent history
confirms another Chicago School judgment: while a breakup might work in the
short term, the most likely course is what happened with Standard Oil and
AT&T, which were broken up, only to essentially recombine a few decades
later.

Nationalization isn't as difficult as it sounds. We tend to forget that we
did, in fact, nationalize General Motors in 2009; the government still
<http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/14/business/government-ownership-and-gm-regu
lation-dont-mix.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all> owns a controlling share of its
stock. We also essentially nationalized the American International Group,
one of the largest insurance companies in the world, and the government
still
<http://news.yahoo.com/treasury-further-lowers-government-stake-aig-22480228
0--sector.html> owns roughly 60 percent of its stock.

Of course, it would probably take another financial meltdown to make banking
nationalization politically tenable. But given how the sector has behaved
since the last crisis, a repetition seems inevitable, and sooner rather than
later. When it comes, we would do well to keep the work of Henry C. Simons
and his acolytes in mind when we contemplate how to rebuild a more equitable
economy.

 <http://www.garalperovitz.com/> Gar Alperovitz, a professor of political
economy at the University of Maryland, is the author of "America Beyond
Capitalism: Reclaiming Our Wealth, Our Liberty, and Our Democracy."

 

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