http://www.thenation.com/doc/20060619/prins

Henry Paulson's Treasury
by NOMI PRINS

[posted online on June 6, 2006]

In the coverage of President Bush's nomination of Henry J. "Hank"
Paulson to 
replace John Snow as Treasury Secretary, I've lost count of the number
of 
mainstream media discussing the "well-worn path" between Goldman Sachs
and 
official Washington. But just because a road is well traveled doesn't
mean 
it leads in the right direction.

Tapping officials from the venerable investment bank for policy-making 
positions in government is a practice that dates back to the Eisenhower 
Administration, when John Foster Dulles, whose law firm represented
Goldman 
Sachs, was appointed Secretary of State.

In more recent history, Goldman Sachs co-CEO Robert Rubin instigated
massive 
banking deregulation in the five years he served as Treasury Secretary
in 
the Clinton Administration. Rubin quit in 1999 for a multimillion-dollar

position at Citigroup. Around the same time, Jon Corzine lost an
internal 
political battle as Paulson's co-CEO, rebounding first as the Democratic

senator of New Jersey and now as governor.

In March 1999, Joshua Bolten left Goldman Sachs to become policy
director of 
the Bush-Cheney campaign, later serving as policy adviser, director of
the 
Office of Management and Budget and ultimately White House Chief of
Staff. 
Stephen Friedman, former Goldman co-CEO with Rubin, was appointed
National 
Economic Council director by Bush from 2002 to 2005.

Enter Hank Paulson, who has spent the past eight years as Goldman Sachs 
chairman and CEO. He joined the firm in 1974 after serving as a member
of 
the White House Domestic Council in the Nixon Administration.

Under Paulson's leadership, Goldman Sachs has become one of Washington's

most generous patrons. Paulson is a top donor--mostly to the GOP. (To
the 
chagrin of critics on the right, Paulson is also an ardent
environmentalist 
and is chairman of The Nature Conservancy.) As Treasury Secretary,
Paulson 
may have to dump some stock (he is the single largest shareholder in
Goldman 
Sachs according to its 2006 proxy statement, with 4.6 million shares) to

decrease his overwhelming conflict of interest, but even if he sells his

unrestricted stock, he'll still have several hundred million bucks in
RSU 
(restricted stock unit) awards, which are not immediately sellable. This

could place him in a position where maintaining his financial well-being

could necessitate supporting policies positive to Goldman's short-term
stock 
price over long-term needs of the general economy, like dividend tax
cuts.

What first struck me upon news of Paulson's possible appointment was
that 
he's too smart to take on this task, with Bush's approval ratings for
his 
economic policies hovering around 40 percent. Then, I got it. Paulson is

Bush's last hurrah--and his last chance. Known as a pragmatic and
decisive 
leader, Paulson will likely be more proactive than Snow, whose sole job 
essentially was traipsing up to Congress once a year and urging
lawmakers to 
raise the US debt cap by another trillion dollars so we wouldn't default
on 
our interest payments to China.

Bush's economic legacy is a weak dollar (who wants to invest in a
country 
teetering on the brink of default?) and tax cuts for the super-wealthy
that 
have created an outrageous deficit and debt. And that legacy benefits
men 
like Paulson at the expense of middle-class Americans and the working
poor. 
It will be a stretch for him to argue for prudent budgeting, while
facing 
the country's highest national debt ever, without cutting social
programs to 
get there.

This shaky economic legacy also makes Paulson's possible appointment
more 
challenging and hence more potentially dangerous than Rubin's. He must
rally 
citizens into believing their individual economic condition is better
than 
it is. Plus, he needs to convince international investors that the
dollar 
isn't in free-fall, despite the abundance of American debt. That's a lot

harder than convincing a board of peers as chairman to compensate your 
fellow senior executives hundreds of millions of dollars.

When Robert Rubin hit Washington, mega-consolidation in the banking
industry 
that led to "Enronian" corporate scandals had yet to be given the 1999 
legislative go-ahead that smashed Glass- Steagall, FDR's New Deal Act 
separating commercial banking from investment banking. Today, things are

more complicated and less regulated.

Separately, the fact that Paulson presided over Goldman Sachs during a 
period when the firm increasingly transformed itself from a classic 
investment bank relying heavily on profit from stable fees into
something 
resembling a hedge fund, in which record profits were based on trading
bets 
made with borrowed funds doesn't make him the most credible proponent of

debt or deficit reduction.

So for Paulson to nab the top Treasury spot is multiples worse. Still,
he is 
strong and confident. That's the scary part. Bush gets a cheerleader to
help 
cement his ideas of individualism, from more tax cuts for the rich to 
privatization of anything politically viable at the moment.

In a highly touted post-Enron-implosion speech at the National Press
Club in 
mid-2002, Paulson urged reform in the financial system in three areas: 
accounting policy, standards of corporate governance and conflict of 
interest. "Conflicts are a fact of life in many, if not most,
institutions, 
ranging from the political arena and government to media and industry,"
he 
said. "The key is how we manage them."

Or how we ignore them. The question isn't how it's a conflict of
interest 
for Paulson to preside over our country's economy but how it's not. 
According to the first general statement laid out in the "Standards of 
Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch": "Public service
is a 
public trust requiring employees to place loyalty in the constitution,
the 
laws and ethical principles above private gain." Even if Paulson
ultimately 
sells all his stock and finds a way to offload his restricted stock, he
will 
wield in the meantime enormous influence over the Treasury bond and
foreign 
currency trading positions of Goldman, with every policy decision on
debt 
issuance or the dollar that he makes. What's good for Goldman isn't 
necessarily good for Middle America. Therein lies the conflict of a man 
whose entire career has been predicated on successfully promoting
corporate 
welfare over public interest.

Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
michael at ecst.csuchico.edu
Chico, CA 95929
530-898-5321
fax 530-898-5901

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