By Zeus Yoammoyiannis
Nothing succeeds like
failure when you are a big bank. We’ve already seen that. Too many articles
have already been written about that.
Heads, the big banks win
through their hugely profitable derivatives and other fake wealth vehicles on
the way up the phony growth curve.
Tails, you, the citizen,
loses as you are forced to redeem this toxic trash for real money in the form
of government bailouts and Federal Reserve purchases as fake value collapses.
“O, the inhumanity, O the injustice.”
Hey, we get it. You can
stop pounding the drums. Bring on Act II: “The current anti-capitalist farce
and its riotous effects.”
Capitalism turned on its
head
What happens to
functioning capitalism when its core operating principles of value and money,
risk, private property, profit, supply and demand, price discovery,
transparency and accountability, productivity, and exchange of worth can
selectively be erased on the whim of self-interested, politically connected
players?
What happens when every
standard of the game is turned upside-down by rule-rigging fat cats and then
cravenly excused by international governments, prosecutors, and regulators? You
get a leaky economic charade riding on a sea of debt bailed out with “expert”
psycho-babble, high-level cheerleading, and government assurances that sound
more each day like sick punch lines to bad jokes:
• “Deficits don’t matter.”
• “The recession has ended.”
• “The weak dollar is good for trade.”
• “Debt just needs to be ‘restructured.’”
• “We just need more government stimulus spending.”
• “Federal zero interest rate policies (ZIRP) help everyone.”
• “Unemployment is down.”
Enough of the minstrel
show and its official nonsense. Here is the real deal on the current
corporate/government war against capitalism:
In order for “value” to
have financial value in the free market it, 1) must have real worth to someone
else, and 2) must be freely chosen. The whole point of a market is that people
choose according to their desires and needs, not yours. No one is entitled to a
profit.
That’s what “market
value” and “free market” mean. Other people, known as “the public,”
interactively determine what your asset, good, or service is worth. You may
think something is financially worth a lot. If others do not, it’s not worth squat.
If you can
merely create private fiat by assigning your own value to your “assets” and
products and then force others to buy them, there is no valid market value or
free market. It is simply financial dictatorship.
Farce #2: Private, self-assigned, fake value is
being traded for public money at 100 cents on the dollar.
Even basic monetary
standards for public exchange of value no longer apply. Now big banks have been
given the executive go-ahead to self-assign value to their assets at any price
they choose. This is called “market to model” (i.e. profitable lying with
complicated mathematical formulas).
This violation of
capitalism comes not only in refusing to allow the market to determine price of
assets, but in forcing the public through government capture to pay for
“impaired private assets” with “real” public money at 100 cents on the dollar!
This is nothing more
than the exchange of publicly accepted money for worthless, private, counterfeit
crap.
However, what “value”
does that public money have? What is the current U.S. dollar tied to? Nothing
of worth. It refers to no credible public asset, good, or service. The Treasury
and the Fed are just printing money, period.
The abstract future
ability of the U.S. to pay off an exponentially increasing debt amid a
long-term contracting economy is not even close to being a plausible
substitute. If that money was invested in infrastructure, perhaps a case could
be made, but can you name even one project that the 800 billion dollars of
“stimulus spending” has funded?
In order for money to be
a credible marker of exchange it must be tied to an asset, good, or service
that has collectively established worth (i.e. commodities, present and future
national productivity, or local networks of exchange of services and goods).
Current money needs to
become rebased in things that produce value, that preserve and enhance present
and future life. At bottom, neither banks nor governments are doing that, and
if anything they seem to be working hard together to kill off both broader
prosperity and free market capitalism.
Farce #4: We have a “free” enterprise system
dominated by monopolies that force people to buy inferior goods and services at
exorbitant rates.
Exhibit A:
“Health” care: U.S. health “insurance” is dominated by regional monopolies that are
notorious for denying treatment and charging double what the rest of the world
charges. What do we get for that? We get a record number of uninsured citizens,
and health results (infant mortality, etc), which are near the bottom, rather
than the top, of industrialized nations.
The U.S. health care
system is also possibly one of the most inefficient in the world in delivering
services, wasting some 750 billion dollars per year in unnecessary spending, including
hundreds of billions of dollars per year in excessive administrative costs.
“The best health care
system in the world”? Hardly. Maybe if you are rich or have generous subsidized
benefits.
Even then, you are not
immune to hospitals that cut safety corners to save on costs, and both slash
pay and increase work hours for the people treating you. Think about it.
Medical error is one of the leading causes of death in the U.S, killing some 200,000 people per year.
Exhibit B:
Military industrial complex boondoggles: The United States is currently spending
almost as much on its military as the rest of the world combined.
What kind of value are
we getting for that? We’ve gotten pointless wars built on politically expedient
lies, that have lasted longer than any wars in modern history, that have cost
trillions, and that have made us less secure.
Farce #5: High-level financial crimes, no matter
how egregious or widespread, are not being prosecuted.
Instead, corrupt and
fraud-ridden organizations like Countrywide, Goldman-Sachs, Bank of America, JP
Morgan, and Citigroup, get bought up and/or pay a small percentage of their
ill-gotten gains to settle civil suits in which they do not admit fault.
The leaders of these
anti-capitalist organizations (Anthony Mazillo, Jamie Dimon, Lloyd Blankfein,
et. al.) still walk away with enormous compensation, after having ruined their
companies and tanked the world economy. When they have to hire legal
representation, they do it at the stockholders’ expense, adding insult to
injury.
There are probably
millions of forged documents, involved in “fraudclosure”, the pervasive
property assignment control fraud that includes all the big financial players.
Companies and citizens have brought civil lawsuits, but these are taking time.
There has been
negligible government investigation, much less criminal prosecution. Here you
have millions of cases of the very foundation of private property, clear
ownership, being decimated by rampant, obvious fraud, and you do nothing?
Oh, I forgot, you extend
the big banks a reprieve in the form of yet another settlement, this time with States’ Attorney Generals (basically
a 25 billion dollar slap on the wrist for trillions of dollars of
interconnected fraud). What does it take for law enforcement to do its job?
What effect does this
have? It screams, “Crime pays!” It destroys the morale of hard-working,
law-abiding citizens, and it keeps zombie banks not only alive and kicking, but
prospering on the backs of citizens.
It sinks the global
economy even more by encouraging financial criminals to double-down on the
profitable crime that got them their unreal returns in the first place.
Where do you think
that’s going to end? Too-big-to-fail is now bigger. Bailouts from central banks
are more frequent. Overt and covert citizen subsidies for this crime keep
climbing. Welcome to the financial cancer club.
Corrupted capitalism
expects you, the citizen, to pay for “their,” the crony capitalists’, failure.
In functioning capitalism, a company and its investors take their own risks,
profit from the gains, and stomach the losses. Other people do not pay for their
mistakes or their crimes.
That core element of
capitalism is now gone. Irish citizens have had to pay many billions just to
cover the losses of one of their private banks. Greece has learned, with its
enforced austerity programs, that if this liability is not paid in dollars (or
the phony dollars of debt restructuring), it gets paid in diminished quality of
life.
There is hardly anything
more important to thriving functioning capitalism than productivity, and
sharing the fruits of productivity. It is notable that productivity among U.S.
workers actually skyrocketed over the last decade and a half, but real wages
have flattened or declined.
Where did the surpluses
go? To parasitic financializers who have seen their share over all corporate
profits grow from 10% to over 45% in recent decades.
After costing trillions and wiping out the world economy, what asset, good, or service do big banks produce that has genuine public worth?
After costing trillions and wiping out the world economy, what asset, good, or service do big banks produce that has genuine public worth?
• “Expert advice”, in which brokers intentionally sell junk to consumers, as shown in investment bank emails?
• “Financial services”, which turn out to be so laden with hidden fees and loosened/fabricated credit qualifications that the lendee is worse off?
• Allegiances that concentrate financial wealth the top 0.1% of the population, causing the vast majority of the world to get poorer?
If anything, citizens
would stand to gain more by paying big banks to close their doors.
Big banks have largely
stopped lending to businesses or individuals because that’s not profitable
enough and because they need to retain capital to reduce their exposure due to
their own foolish overleveraging. This depresses community and small business entrepreneurship
and productivity.
Bottom line: Big banks’
“services” take far more in costs than they provide in benefits. Much would be
gained, and little lost, if they were allowed to fail or were decommissioned
outright for their criminal behavior.
Conclusion
In short, the
non-accountability of big banks means American honest work and honest gain will
be increasingly ripped off. This is a zero-sum game in which not even a single,
direct, effective champion of the interest of broader American and middle and
working class interest exists in the actual machinery of Washington.
Those few heroes, the
former and present prosecutors and officials who have attempted to enforce
transparency and accountability, Elizabeth Warren, Brooksley Born, Harry
Markopolos, Neil Barofsky, and William K. Black have either been ignored,
pushed out, or shut down.
“I thought that if there was ever going to be a political figure that would take on the interests of Wall Street, and put the American people… above the monied interests, it was going to be President Obama, and that just didn’t happen. In fact it was the opposite. He had the same ideology as Timothy Geithner [and others from Wall Street]: ‘Protect the banks. What is best for the biggest banks is what’s best for the country.’”
This is pretty grim
stuff, but it has a silver lining: When you don’t have champions to manage the
economy fairly or effectively, you organize yourselves to transform your
economy.
Both liberal and
conservative officials have turned themselves from public servants
into private servants. We, in response, have no excuse but to turn
ourselves into necessary public champions. We must decide and
act upon our choices to drive the economy in a healthy direction.
Economy cannot exist
without people and their agreement. It is our job now to form the next
principles and new, healthy practices as we turn away from a corrupted system.
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