Really good stuff here.  Solutions can be debated but the description of the 
problem is excellent.

Kevin
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: [email protected] 
  To: [email protected] 
  Cc: [email protected] 
  Sent: Wednesday, November 23, 2011 6:04 PM
  Subject: [RC] Crony Capitalism = Socialism for the Rich = the rest of us get 
screwed





  Real Clear Politics / Real Clear Markets



  November 22, 2011 
  How Government Props Up Big Finance
  By Marc Joffe & Anthony Randazzo

  Since medieval times, writers and ethicists have counted envy among the seven 
deadly sins. In utilitarian terms, envy is at best a zero-sum game because it 
can only be satisfied when someone loses.

  Given this moral and practical failing, it is a shame that envy plays such a 
large role in the Occupy Wall Street protests spread around the country. And, 
yet, the Occupy movement does have a point that transcends this negative 
emotion: the financial industry has grown large on the backs of government 
handouts, manipulated regulation, and taxpayer bailouts.

  While there is no objective size the financial industry should be, it is fair 
to say it would never have become this large without the crony capitalist 
system that has masqueraded as a free market. In the process, the financial 
industry has absorbed resources that could better be used elsewhere while 
imposing large, systemic risks on the economy. Watching others grow rich from 
special privilege understandably leads to envy, but from this perspective, the 
high compensation received by financial industry leaders is merely a symptom of 
a much larger problem.

  Big finance has achieved its present girth on the back of numerous policy 
decisions - some going back centuries. Many of these policies had the intention 
of protecting the general public, but often had the unintended consequence of 
enriching bankers beyond the product of their labor.

  For example, central banks often seek to encourage growth by lowering 
interest rates for small businesses and individuals. But in the process it is 
mainly large banks that benefit from higher margins, as the Fed provides 
lendable funds at a steep discount - not all of which is shared with borrowers. 
Federal policies designed to assist homebuyers also benefit mortgage investors 
and grant them taxpayer supported guarantees they will get paid (bailing out 
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac has already cost $182 billion as a result).

  Subsidized mortgages also result in higher home prices - undermining 
affordability goals. Over the long term, consumers become more leveraged, while 
financial firms collect more interest and fees.

  But special privileges to the financial industry predate discretionary 
monetary policy and subsidized lending. Indeed, these privileges are so 
embedded in our system, they never occur to us. Perhaps the most distortionary 
of these is banking licenses that offer limited liability. Without such 
licenses, bank owners would have to use their personal assets to redeem 
deposits if borrowers default. Limited liability reduces the bank owners' risk 
to just their initial investment. The large number of state banking licenses 
granted during the nineteenth century allowed "one-percenters" of that era to 
profit from borrowing and lending, without worrying about large losses. They 
could also grow their institutions by making loans to less creditworthy 
borrowers, thereby creating systemic risk.

  This risk was usually shouldered by depositors, who often lost money during 
bank runs. During the Depression, the federal government solved this problem by 
creating deposit insurance. FDIC insurance enabled banks to grow even more, and 
it also freed them to take on even greater risks, since depositors no longer 
worried about how their funds were being deployed.

  As financial institutions have grown and consolidated over the years, some 
have become so systematically important that they have been deemed too big to 
fail. These institutions are now effectively eligible for bailouts in which all 
creditors - and not just small depositors - are made whole while management can 
either remain in place, or walk away with all their previous compensation plus 
a severance package to boot.

  These protections and hidden subsidies have enabled the financial industry to 
achieve enormous size and profitability, while placing the overall economy at 
great risk. Usually, these protections were accompanied by regulations such as 
capital requirements or size restrictions. These regulations usually failed to 
achieve their intended results - especially over the long term - because 
financial institutions are able to wear down the restrictions by lobbying and 
by hiring away key regulators.

  Instead of adding to the quantity of regulation, thereby creating more 
opportunities for the financial industry to game the system, we should tame the 
financial beast through greater accountability. One way to do this is to add a 
10 percent co-insurance feature to FDIC insurance for deposits above $10,000. 
Depositors with $11,000 in a failed bank would receive $10,900; while those 
with a $250,000 balance would get $226,000.

  Depositors would not be wiped out in the event of a failure, but they would 
have an incentive to select banks that are more careful with their money (while 
the poorest are still fully protected). Banks would then have to compete for 
depositor business, in part, by demonstrating that they have strong risk 
management.

  Those with exposure above the FDIC limit should take at least a 25 percent 
haircut through the resolution process in the event of a bank failure. These 
stakeholders are often large financial institutions, acting as counterparties, 
who have the skill and resources to more closely monitor the banks with which 
they deal. This reform would address one of the most disturbing episodes of the 
financial crisis: Goldman Sachs' full recovery on CDO insurance contracts that 
triggered the AIG bailout. Certainly low and middle income taxpayers had better 
uses for this money than awarding it to the highly compensated financial 
wizards at Goldman.

  Bank managers should also have more skin in the game. If a bank fails or 
receives a bailout, directors, senior managers and highly compensated employees 
should have to repay creditors or the government at least a portion of past 
compensation they received from their failed institutions - particularly 
compensation tied to performance. Fear of impoverishment would have a 
substantial impact on the risk appetites for those leading major financial 
institutions.

  Finally, federally subsidized or guaranteed loans should be restricted to the 
truly needy. Today, mortgages of up to $625,500 can be purchased by Fannie Mae 
and Freddie Mac on the federal government's credit card. This subsidy should be 
limited to homes that are below the median price for a given area. If financial 
industry players want to originate mortgages to members of the upper middle 
class, they should be willing to assume the full risk of providing these loans.

  Indiscriminately taxing the rich is an envy-driven policy that only 
marginally addresses Wall Street's size, profitability and systemic risk. 
Vindication should always be discarded in favor of an effective reprieve. 
Policies that require financial industry participants to shoulder more of the 
risks they create will reduce the burden Wall Street imposes on the general 
public, will shrink the industry, and will release human talent for higher and 
better purposes.

  Rather than demotivate the next Steve Jobs, or reduce the resources Bill 
Gates deploys to fight AIDS and malaria, let's instead focus the Occupiers' 
energy on advocating solutions that truly improve the lives of the 99 percent.


  -- 
  Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
  Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
  Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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