Wall Street’s Great Heist of 2008
1st November 2008

The Wall Street Journal published a front-page article Friday
reporting that the nine biggest US banks, which have received a
combined $125 billion in taxpayer funds as part of the $700 billion
bailout authored by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and passed by the
Democratic Congress, owed their executives more than $40 billion for
recent years’ compensation and pensions as of the end of 2007.

This means that nearly a third of the public funds given to these
banks will ultimately be used to increase the private fortunes of a
handful of multimillionaire Wall Street executives.

This revelation, the result of an analysis of the banks’ corporate
reports by the American financial elite’s own chief organ, provides a
stark exposure of the social interests that are being served by the
government bailout. More generally, it provides an instructive insight
into class relations in America.

It has already been widely reported that the banks are refusing to use
their government windfalls to resume lending to other banks,
businesses and consumers—the ostensible purpose of the cash injections—
and are, instead, hoarding the money for the purpose of acquiring
smaller and weaker banks. The so-called economic rescue plan is, in
fact, a plan to effect a rapid consolidation of the US banking system,
resulting in the domination of the economy by a few mega-banks, which
will be free to set interest rates and lending standards as they see
fit.

Far from opposing this development, Treasury Secretary Paulson and the
Federal Reserve Board are encouraging it. They deliberately designed
the bailout to place no restrictions on how the banks use their
taxpayer money and then enacted changes in the tax code to give banks
acquiring other banks a huge tax break. (See: “The ‘dirty little
secret’ of the US bank bailout”)

As the Journal explains, the minimal restrictions on future executive
compensation stipulated in the bailout bill do not affect deferred
payments to executives accumulated over previous years. Since such
deferred payment accounts are commonplace in the banking industry and
are the preferred means by which top executives build up nest eggs in
the hundreds of millions of dollars, those who are primarily
responsible for the financial disaster and, in many cases, the ruin of
their own companies, will emerge from the crisis richer than ever.

As the Journal puts it: “The deferred-compensation programs for
executives are like 401(k) plans on steroids.” At some of the banks
that have received government handouts, the newspaper notes, the total
amounts previously incurred and owed to their executives exceed what
they owe in pensions to their entire work forces.

The newspaper notes that at Goldman Sachs, formerly headed by Paulson,
“the $11.8 billion obligation primarily for deferred executive
compensation dwarfed the liability for its broad-based pension plan
for all employees. That was just $399 million.”

Goldman received $10 billion of the $125 billion doled out to the
biggest banks. JPMorgan Chase, which was granted $25 billion, owes its
top officers $8.5 billion. Citigroup, another $25 billion recipient,
owes $5 billion, and Morgan Stanley, which got $10 billion in taxpayer
money, is in debt to its top executives to the tune of $10 to $12
billion.

A separate article in the same issue of the Journal amplifies this
picture of parasitism and criminality. Headlined “Securities Firms
Tackle Pay Issue,” it deals with discussions among the top executives
of Wall Street firms such as Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Merrill
Lynch over the advisability of paring down their traditional
multimillion-dollar year-end bonuses in the face of growing public
outrage.

The article notes that since the start of 2002, Goldman Sachs, Morgan
Stanley, Merrill Lynch, Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns have paid a
total of $312 billion in compensation and benefits. It estimates that
these firms have also paid out $187 billion in bonuses, for a grand
total of $499 billion. Much of this staggering sum—more than five-and-
a-half times the total income of the firms—has gone to the top echelon
of executives.

The latter three firms have either disappeared or are in the process
of being taken over. Bear Stearns was bought out by JPMorgan Chase
last March in a deal subsidized by the government in the amount of $29
billion; Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy in September, and
Merrill Lynch has agreed to sell itself to Bank of America in a
government-brokered agreement.

While the bank executives were awarding themselves tens of millions in
salaries and bonuses, their companies were being run into the ground.
Since the start of 2007, for example, Merrill Lynch has had net losses
of nearly $20 billion, or virtually all of the profits it made from
2003 to 2006. CEO John Thain took in $83 million in 2007. Now,
thousands of Merrill employees are being laid off to cut $7 billion in
costs as part of the takeover by Bank of America.

The events of the past two months have brought into sharper focus the
naked power exercised by the American financial aristocracy over
society and the state. All of the various schemes devised in response
to the near-collapse of the financial system have had one thing in
common: they proceed from the need to uphold the interests of the most
powerful banks and the richest of the rich.

The combination of impotence, servility and duplicity of Congress and
its Democratic leadership is being mercilessly exposed. Charles
Schumer, the Democratic chairman of the Joint Economic Committee, said
this week in regard to the banks’ refusal to use the government money
to extend new loans, “There’s not much we can do other than jawbone.”

Christopher Dodd, the Democratic chairman of the Senate Banking
Committee, blustered, “The intent here certainly wasn’t for healthy
banks to buy healthy banks—it’s infuriating.”

Dodd, it would seem, is shocked to learn that the bailout plan he
adamantly supported is being used to serve the narrow self-interest of
the bankers. Even if one makes the implausible assumption that this
veteran of Washington politics and favorite of Wall Street is not
being disingenuous, that does not alter the fact of his utter
prostration before the real power brokers in America.

Nothing is permissible that impinges on the basic prerogatives of the
financial oligarchy, no matter the cost to the American people. On
critical matters regarding the class interests of the ruling elite,
the people have no say.

There is a ruling class in America. The administration, Congress, the
courts—all of the agencies of the state—are, behind the trappings of
democracy, instruments of its domination.




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