http://www.zcommunications.org/book-review-epic-recession-by-carl-finamore
Book Review: Epic Recession

How Did it Happen, How Bad will it Get?
By Carl Finamore

Tuesday, July 06, 2010


In the not too distant past, bankers, financiers and investors could do 
no wrong. They were the wizards of Wall Street, ushering in a new era of 
economic expansion. But by around 2006, it became very clear their magic 
was just an illusion. The only thing real was millions of homeowners 
defaulting, millions of pensioners watching their 401Ks evaporate and 
millions of workers losing their jobs.

Investors and bankers didn’t fare nearly as bad.  They seemed to just 
shut down their old hustle, moved on down the road and reopened for 
business as if nothing had happened. Billionaire Warren Buffet’s two 
rules to investors were in full force and effect and backed up by the 
U.S. Treasury: “Number one rule is to never lose money and number two 
rule is to never forget rule number one.”

In fact, big business pretty much made up its own rules during the last 
three decades. Taxes for corporations and the wealthiest were 
continually lowered and regulatory obstacles to domestic and offshore 
investments were eliminated. At the same time, conversely, wages for the 
majority remained stagnant since 1973.

Not surprisingly, a dramatic shift in wealth occurred during this time. 
Forbes Magazine lists the 400 wealthiest Americans with a total net 
worth of $1.27 trillion. Their poorer cousins, the top one percent, 
control 40% of our wealth if housing alone is excluded.

On the other hand, the majority is being squeezed more and more and 
purse strings tightened. Simply put, the average consumer has been 
losing ground in the last thirty years.

Extensions of credit to family households concealed this decline and 
kept the economy going until debt burdens finally led to the current 
wave of defaults, especially in the housing market where speculators 
drove prices to unprecedented levels.

Too much money in the hands of too few fundamentally led to the crisis, 
according to Jack Rasmus, a former elected union official turned college 
professor and writer, whose latest book, Epic Recession, Prelude to 
Global Depression, has just been released by Pluto Press.
“A massive amount of liquidity in the hands” of “wealthy individuals, 
their various investing institutions like hedge funds, private equity 
firms, private banks” and corporations have created over the last three 
decades a “global money parade…that sloshes around the global economy in 
pursuit of the greatest short-term returns, which in recent years have 
become increasingly speculative in nature.”

Rasmus cites 2006 statistics that reveal both the relative value of 
global financial assets and their infinite variety such as cash, stocks, 
bonds, options, certificates of deposit, commercial paper, money funds, 
foreign currency, precious metals, commodity futures, derivatives, 
redeemable insurance contracts, accounting receivables and more.

The endless, toxic brew of financial cocktails outstripped the world’s 
total production of commodities by a factor of three. In the United 
States, it was worse, the enormously lucrative financial sector 
accounted for four times the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), a measure of 
all the goods and services produced in this country.

Numerous investment schemes were concocted to attract this excess glut 
of global capital that saw more profit in paper transactions than in 
production of real goods and services. As demand for speculative 
ventures multiplied, so did the stock market.

The Dow Jones jumped an incredible 8000 points from 1994-2000, the 
largest leap in its history. All seemed to be going good, too good as it 
turned out. Little of real, hard physical value was being produced as 
the global economy was awash with trillions of dollars in the pockets of 
the wealthiest among us, all swimming toward the next big speculative 
venture. Cracks began to appear during the Asian currency crisis and the 
Dot.com bust of the last decade, creating what billionaire financier 
George Soros described as a “longer-term super bubble.”  But, thinking 
they held all the cards, the Federal Reserve Bank threw more chips into 
the pot by dramatically lowering interest rates.

The Fed often worked this way by making sure the money faucet flowed 
anytime Wall Street got a little thirsty. With more money on the table, 
banks in the first years of this decade actually aggressively pursued 
home buyers just to keep the casino doors open. More home buyers meant 
higher home prices meaning even more eager purchasers of 
mortgage-bundled investments. With new blood in the water, the feeding 
frenzy by speculators continued. Thus, warning tremors were ignored as 
profits continued to flow. Few recognized or wanted to admit that the 
economy was built on shallow landfill unprepared for the next “Big One” 
to hit.

However, when consumers could no longer afford the skyrocketing price of 
a home, the hot item topping the menu of speculators the last few years, 
the housing market finally collapsed. The resulting sag in home 
purchases in 2006 was compounded by the growing number of defaults, thus 
triggering an enormous free fall of the fragile financial structures 
that depended so heavily on the fantasy that home prices would steadily 
and endlessly increase.

How did this Happen?

New financial packages were developed in the U.S. housing sector that 
profited enormously as each mortgage of the original physical asset, a 
home in this example, was bundled together with assorted other stock 
portfolios, hedge funds and securities that was passed along a chain of 
sellers and buyers. Each investor profited from every subsequent 
exchange even as the paper trail extended far beyond the initial real, 
material asset of the home.
Speculators of home mortgages both produced and greatly benefited from 
the surge in housing prices. In fact, higher home prices were essential 
to maintaining the profitable sale and resale of these bundled mortgage 
investments to new investors climbing on board.
As is the nature of Wall Street thrill seekers, no one believed the ride 
would end.

In fact, to keep the wheel of fortune turning, lenders began desperately 
and aggressively offering no interest home loans to credit-deficient 
working people who subsequently defaulted when the Federal Reserve Bank 
began raising their credit line from a floor of one percent to over six 
percent after 2003.

Hundreds of thousands of defaulting families, often portrayed by Wall 
Street apologists as causing the deep recession, are really the victims 
and pawns of these shady pyramid schemes.

The whole scheme depended on housing prices rising and this worked for 
awhile as speculative demand for housing derivatives increased. But, at 
some point, the material asset of a home, for example, must actually 
correspond to a more real set of values.
Rasmus makes the point that supply and demand restraints do not equally 
apply to speculative ventures. In fact, it is demand that is the driving 
force there and as demand grew for the sale and resale multiple times of 
home mortgages to investment firms, for example, so did the price of 
each subsequent transaction escalate.  Profits and fees were added along 
each step, thus, also driving higher the price of homes.

The price of the real, physical entity of a home, unlike its various 
speculative paper derivative counterparts, however, is affected by 
market supply and demand as Rasmus explains. So, when home prices 
outdistanced the ability of cash-strapped and debt-ridden consumers, a 
cascade of defaults resulted, adding to the housing glut and leading to 
dramatic declines in home prices.

The boom finally went bust. But Buffet and the other billionaires are 
still smiling. They either profited enormously in those years or were 
bailed out by the Bush and Obama administrations that subsidized several 
trillion dollars of losses of the 19 largest banks and investment firms 
in the United States.

But not one dollar was extended by the government to homeowners 
directly. In effect, nothing has been done to solve the underlying 
problem which is that working families have become chronic under 
consumers. The problem is acerbated since being deprived of credit which 
was the one life line to compensate for lower wages and higher health 
care costs.

The author does not, therefore, exclude the economy descending even 
further. The current situation is nothing more than a holding pattern, a 
stalemate that only temporarily avoids descent into depression. The 
fragile banking system was beefed up but little has been done to rebuild 
the deteriorating condition of worker consumers in this country and no 
recovery is possible without this being addressed.

Depression of Recovery?

Not surprisingly, the former labor organizer offers a political theme in 
his final chapter recommending solutions. In it, he expresses more 
confidence in a rejuvenated union movement that champions working class 
economic and social reforms than he does in the politicians in 
Washington who have amply demonstrated their class bias favoring banks 
and investors.

The book contains descriptions of several other epic recessions in our 
past such as in 1907-1914 and in1929-1931 where little or no government 
spending on jobs led to what the author calls severe “consumption 
fragility,” setting the stage for long-term stagnation on the road 
towards a full blown depression.

These economic catastrophes were only averted by massive government 
spending leading up to WW1 and WW11.

For Rasmus, turning the economy around today means learning from these 
experiences by, first, closing the widening gap in wealth between the 
top and the bottom and by, secondly, investing that surplus directly 
into productive sectors of the economy.

It starts with substantial tax reform of capital income.

For example, the huge state deficits of California and New York could be 
wiped out today by applying a one percent tax on the top one percent of 
their wealthiest residents. Many European countries do this.

With a correct tax program, there would be no national, state or 
municipal deficits. In fact, there would be a tax surplus resulting from 
more working people employed and earning a decent living.

It would shift the side-tracked political discussion in this country 
away from using existing deficits, mostly induced by war spending and 
bank bailouts, as an excuse to halt government spending on jobs and 
social programs.

“These are key political points,” Rasmus told me, “that must be raised 
and discussed more, otherwise folks will think the only alternative is 
to cut the deficit which means immensely more pain for the working class 
and, inevitably, a descent into depression”
His other solutions include nationalization of key banking transactions 
to provide no-interest home loans, the same benefit provided to 
bailed-out banks and investment firms.

The fraudulent nature of the economic boom of the last decade has been 
exposed.

The book explains how it happened, how previous recessions and 
depressions arose and abated, how dramatic structural changes of the 
economy must go well beyond reinstituting needed banking regulations and 
how the government should acquire funds through a fairer tax system and 
then spend these trillions of dollars for social programs and jobs to 
upright a thoroughly imbalanced economy tilted toward the super rich.

The reader is conveniently provided three distinct book sections which 
can each be read independently: a discussion of broad economic theory, a 
description of U.S. economic history and an analysis of the causes and 
solutions to the current epic recession. The introduction gives an 
excellent overview of all three of these chapters.

Thus, the author is the exception to George Bernard Shaw’s observation 
that “if all economists were laid end to end, they would not reach a 
conclusion.” On the contrary, Professor Rasmus has plenty of opinions, 
all fact-based, and plenty of conclusions, all well-documented.

But the author does face the obstacle wittily noted by another famous 
authority, the late liberal American economist John Kenneth Galbraith 
who once wrote that “economics is a subject…resonant with boredom. On 
few topics is an American audience so practiced in turning off its ears 
and minds. And none can say the response is ill advised.”

Students, workers, social activists, and those who simply want to 
examine more closely the collapsing world economy dramatically affecting 
us all, would be well advised to plunge ahead. To be sure, this is not a 
happy face book that can be read leisurely with your Ipod blasting away. 
This is a scholarly work on a serious subject that deserves to be 
studied thoughtfully. This does not mean it is too difficult to understand.

On the contrary, the book shatters the mystique of economics. Human 
decisions, not Adam Smith’s legendary “invisible hand,” have brought us 
to the brink of disaster. If you want to understand better the world 
around us, better understand the current turmoil engulfing us and better 
understand and even anticipate future events that lie ahead for us, Epic 
Recession belongs on your bookshelf.


Carl Finamore first met then-CWA Business Agent Jack Rasmus some thirty 
years ago when Rasmus was leading a militant strike in Oakland, 
California. Company security thugs unexpectedly rushed a small strike 
rally and tried to break it up. Pickets reacted immediately. The goons 
were literally picked up and thrown out on their ears with their 
surveillance film equipment flung in all directions. Finamore never 
tires of retelling that story.  He is a delegate to the San Francisco 
Labor Council, AFL-CIO. He can be reached at [email protected]
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