Asher Edelman writes:
Banking is the least understood, and possibly most
lethal, of all the myriad issues at stake in this election.
No candidate other
than Bernie Sanders is capable of taking the steps
necessary to protect the American people from a repeat of the recent debacle
that plunged the nation into a recession from which we have not recovered.
The potential for a depression looms heavily on the
horizon. As a trained economist who has spent more than 20 years on Wall Street
– and one of the models for Gordon Gekko’s character – I know the financial
system is in urgent need of regulation and responsibility.
Yet Hillary Clinton is beholden to the banks for their
largesse in funding her campaign and lining her pockets.
The likelihood of any
Republican candidate taking on this key issue is not even worthy of discussion.
The recession of 2007-2016, and the persistent transfer
of wealth from the 80% to the 1% is, mostly the result of banking
irresponsibility precipitated by the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act in 1999.
The law separated commercial banking (responsible for gathering and
conservatively lending out funds) from investment banking (more speculative
activities).
A new culture emerged that rewarded bankers for return on
equity rather than sound lending practices. The wild west of risk-taking,
staked on depositors’ money, became the best sport in town.
Why not? If management
won, they got rich. When they lost, the taxpayer took on the responsibility.
If
that sounds like a good wager, it was (and is). The only problem is what happens when the music ends.
Debt-to-capital ratios for investment banking functions rose from 12:1 to 30:1.
Options on derivatives on other derivatives increased that leverage many fold.
Self-regulation became the rule and, lo and behold, in 2008: crash.
America and
the world were nailed by a fastball from which the bottom 80% of the American
population has yet to recover.
Remarkably, today the derivatives positions held by the
large banks approach 10 times those of 2007-2008.
In four banks alone, they
exceed the GDP of the entire world.
This is the interesting consequence when
unchecked risk management rests in bankers’ hands.
When Clinton repealed Glass-Steagall, it was the
culmination of the largest ever lobbying effort by the banking community to
that date, $300m spent to convince Congress that Clinton, aided by Robert Rubin
(US treasurer, previously with Goldman Sachs) and Alan Greenspan, a Milton
Friedman-style supply-side economist, that the restraints on speculation should
be removed.
The banking community’s gratitude was and is unending. Who can
blame them?
Wait, there’s more.
After the collapse of 2008, the
Federal Reserve invested more than $15tn to save the banks under the guise of
monetary stimulation.
At the same time, little or no funds were channeled to
the needs of the American people. Yet today we face another crisis of
liquidity.
This time Europe will break first, followed by their highly
leveraged US colleagues.
Meanwhile, the bottom 80% of Americans remain mired in
a recession, having seen no increase in their incomes during the last 20 years.
Poverty is at its highest level since the 1930s (in some
areas of the country, higher). More than 30% of all children live with families
subsisting below the poverty level.
Employment is at a new all-time low (the
percentage of employed persons is at about 49%, having been at more than 52% prior
to 2008).
The average American is entitled to more. Only Bernie
Sanders is committed to honest solutions to these problems.
The way to avert
the next banking crisis is the most clear.
Assuming a Republican Congress,
which would prevent the reinstatement of Glass-Steagall, Bernie has only to
turn to regulation and responsibility.
Dodd-Frank provides the necessary structure with which to
begin. Enforce it. Put teeth into bank regulation.
Determine the acceptable
level of risk at which banks can operate. Make management, not underlings or
stockholders, responsible for violating the law.
Encourage the Justice
Department to be clear in seeking appropriate penalties for financial crimes in
large institutions, not by fines alone but by the prosecution of those
executives responsible.
Split up the banks that are speculating with depositor
and government funds.
Investment banks are supposed to risk investors’ money
but commercial banks should return to lending fairly and carefully to help
create a foundation for future growth.
Bernie Sanders is the only independent
candidate who escapes the malaise of being bought. He is paid for by the people
and represents their interests.
And you can take that to the bank.
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