Now that Lehman Brothers,
formerly the fourth largest investment bank in the United States, is
first largest in American bankruptcies, it's time to again ask: When
will Washington get it?
It should never have been the Fed's responsibility, or the
government's, to back investment bank speculation. Instilling stability
in the financial system should have been goal enough. Unfortunately,
neither the Federal
Reserve,
nor the government, nor the presidential candidates (nor, not that it
matters, the president) know how to meet that goal, and piecemeal fixes
won't do the trick. Only a bout of sweeping and decisive regulation
could work.
There's precedent: The
last time the banking system stood at the brink of implosion was in
1932, three years after the 1929 stock market crash.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt zoomed past Herbert Hoover into the White
House, and FDR stood up to the unrestrained power of Wall Street and
contained it. The resultant New Deal included a stoplight at the heavy
intersection of financial capital and unregulated greed, called the
Glass-Steagall Act of 1933.
Decisively, the Act forced
institutions within the banking community
to pick a side. You want to deal with the population at large, take
their deposits, give them a safe place for their savings, and make
reasonable loans for which you are as responsible as the borrowers?
Terrific. As a commercial bank in 1933, the newly established Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC) backed your depositors and the federal
government regulated you.
Alternately, as an
investment bank at the time you could raise
capital through speculative investors at home or overseas. But you
wouldn't get federal backing, and you couldn't use the citizenry's
capital to fund your trading activities.
That simple Glass-Steagall
separation not only kept consumer and
speculative capital from intertwining within the same institution, it
made it possible to understand the activities of all financial
organizations. Transparency was not perfect, but it was more easily
accomplished.
Lehman Brothers got a
taste of the intent of Glass-Steagall Sunday
night. Their demise is ugly, not just because of their 156-year
history, the 25,000 employees who are suddenly without jobs, or the
long list of institutions to which Lehman owed money that will be
slugging it out in bankruptcy court.
It is ugly because
Washington still doesn't appear to get it. While Federal Reserve
Chairman Ben Bernanke
is desperately trying to figure out how to save the banking industry
from itself, and Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson can't wait until the
election saves him from himself, malignant inertia reigns.
The catalyst for this
current crisis may be the housing market, but
the larger culprit is the killing of Glass-Steagall, which paved the
way for this recklessness.
Yet, rather than
considering the massive risks of merging commercial
and speculative banking interests, federal officials actually pushed
for Bank of America's $50 billion all-stock takeover of Merrill Lynch.
That knee-jerk move follows the same dangerous pattern that began when
Citigroup took over Salomon Brothers in 1999.
The Fed wants to avoid
another huge failure in Merrill Lynch by
pushing it under the rug of Bank of America, but B of A can't possibly
know the extent of Merrill's potential losses. That a commercial bank
is taking over a speculative giant is much more dangerous than Lehman
Brothers tanking. The Fed was well within its rights to say 'no' to
Lehman's plea for a bailout. But unlike Lehman or Bear, B of A is
responsible for the accounts of millions of customers-real people with
real money on the line. If Bank of America gets in real trouble, the
Fed's hand may be forced.
The speculative nature of
the current banking industry, in which
commercial and investment banks can borrow beyond their abilities to
repay, is a threat to national economic security. Lehman's demise means
the dumping of more worthless real estate investments into an already
oversaturated market. (If Lehman could have sold its assets for enough
capital infusion, it would have done so.) Lehman's bankruptcy will only
damage the market further, as other players find even less appetite for
their real estate waste.
In all of this turmoil,
citizens will see their ability to get
loans, even if they are qualified, cut further. Bank of America, as one
of the nation's leading lenders, would be wise to figure out what their
risk is in taking over the behemoth that is Merrill, and quantify just
how much capital it is on the hook for before extending any more.
©
2008 The Foundation for National Progress
Nomi
Prins is an economist and Mother Jones writer.
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