Hands-Off Attitude Towards Financial Regulation - Cause & Effect?

by: David Sirota

Mon Apr 06, 2009 at 12:20


The real-world effects of corruption can feel distant and hard to understand. But this week via White House aide Larry Summers, we got  a very concrete, easy-to-understand example of how our pay-to-play political system really works.
David Sirota :: Hands-Off Attitude Towards Financial Regulation - Cause & Effect?
Here was a snippet of news reported at the end of the week:

Lawrence H. Summers, the top economic adviser to President Obama, earned more than $5 million last year from the hedge fund D. E. Shaw and collected $2.7 million in speaking fees from Wall Street companies that received government bailout money, the White House disclosed Friday in releasing financial information about top officials...

Here was one of the results (or lack thereof) of the G-20 meeting:

Hedge funds that are "systemically important" will be subjected to greater oversight as will all key financial instruments, markets and instruments, the G-20 said. That signals a setback for German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who wanted all of the investment funds to brought under the spotlight.

The Christian Science Monitor went on to note that "the pledges of new regulations were also somewhat vague" and the new international financial "stability board won't have any actual powers."

Certainly, any regulatory action - even weak ones - are a good step. But let's remember: the Obama administration has been resisting European proposals for tougher regulation for weeks now. Though, as I told CNN, Europe won a big victory for progressivism by getting the G-20 to adopt any regulatory step in the right direction, the Obama administration clearly limited the scope and strength of that success. And while it's fair to say that Summers alone didn't do this, it's also fair to assume he (and Michael Froman, a former top Cigitroup exec now serving as deputy national security adviser for international economic affairs) had a hand in this outcome.

Was there a quid pro quo whereby Summers took cash from Wall Street and then entered the administration and did Wall Street's bidding? Not explicitly, no. Bribery in our country most often operates in the world of the implicit - Summers got the cash because he was a solid Wall Street investment, a guy who could be counted on to continue championing deregulation in crucial government and public policy spheres. It was likely both a reward for his longtime deregulation advocacy, and an encouragement for him to continue in that advocacy - a signal that he will continue to be rewarded for his extremism.

And we now see the consequences. With the global community ready to embrace very strong financial regulations, our government - whose economic policy is steered by Summers - worked to water down those regulations.

There's a cause and effect there - it may not be overt, it may be subtle, the news media may be more interested in reporting on the trivialities of Barack and Michelle's European travels, and the Summers case may be a microcosm of a larger systemic probem, but it's there. You can avert your eyes from it, stomp your feet and pretend beyond a reasonable doubt that it's not true, but it's right there.


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It's truly obscene (4.00 / 4)
to see how much money the likes of Larry Summers and Rahm Emanuel can make for a paltry amount of work when that work is funded by corporations with such an enormous stake in the very regulatory domain over which Summers and Emanuel exert power -- both before and after those gigs.

If you're a Wall Street finance firm, and you realize that your stake in having a very friendly regulatory structure is in the billions, how hard is it to justify throwing a few tens of millions at people who have played, or will play, a major role in determining that regulatory structure? What could better send the message to everybody in government that riches will be theirs if they allow the money to keep flowing?

Really, under those circumstances, what corporation needs an actual bribe to get what they want? It would be nearly impossible to hide a bribe of millions of dollars; and what government official is in no position to wait until they leave government service to collect those millions?  


Not "bribery", exactly (4.00 / 5)
this is a fine example of systemic corruption. There is no "quid pro quo" needed. Like-minded people support each other (financially, whether speaking fees, campaign contributions. or appointing friendly faces to government positions) and its just "natural" that the kind of policies that the folks signing the checks would like to see are the ones that emerge. I'd call it a "conspiracy", but why ask to be censored?

I think that's part of the reason the "political class" reacted so negatively to Gov. Blago on IL - he was so uncouth and made all the corruption look like what is actually is. Indefensible.

"It sounds wrong...
     ...but its right."


[ Parent ]
The method used by (4.00 / 6)
Wall Street is actually more effective than a bribe.

The money is far bigger than a bribe might be (compare the rather trivial amounts involved in most actual cases of bribes of politicians). While there's no quid pro quo for any individual, it is, only more effectively, in effect extended to an entire class of officials -- the very class of officials who are responsible for the regulations. Each and every official in that class understands that they can cash in on their "background" in finance at any time of their choosing if and only if they push for Wall Street friendly regulation.  


[ Parent ]
Very true. (4.00 / 4)
For example, has Summers been more progressive, like Stiglitz, he likely would not have made millions.  Further, he would not have the job he has now.

In the end, it is Barack Obama who chose Summers knowing full well his history and current support of neo-liberalism, which strongly suggests that President Obama shares those views.


What's very (4.00 / 3)
hard to imagine is that Wall Street firms would extend gigs like those of Summers and Emanuel to former government officials who were openly unfriendly to the deregulation they literally live on.

If you're a government official responsible for that regulation, what is the clear message? If you want millions in your own future, do what you need to do to make us rich.

As I said in my comment above, this sort of incentive is vastly better than an actual bribe might be, if for no other reason than that the money involved can be orders of magnitude greater.

It's rather pathetic to see what generally passes for actual bribes nowadays among politicians -- typically temporary uses of cars, or jets, or smallish gifts, or some kind of break on a home. But how about the over 5 million that Summers made just for a part time job, or the 6 or 7 million (as I recall) that Emanuel made for a short gig with a financial firm? Far bigger money, no legal muss or fuss. It's the perfection of corruption.


[ Parent ]
The Perfection of Corruption (0.00 / 0)
That's the title of a book waiting to be written.


"It sounds wrong...
     ...but its right."


[ Parent ]
PS. Change? (0.00 / 0)
Hope?

Or business as usual?

 


The money he made (4.00 / 2)
from the hedge fund (last year about 100,000 a day) is only part of the story. As this Times's story shows that contacts he made while working for D.E. Shaw-some of whom stand to benefit from the bailout plan--are advising him right now.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04...


. (0.00 / 0)
Let's be serious here. The global community was ready for AMERICA to embrace greater financial regulation. Wall Street isn't in fuckin Belgium.

"It's amazing how tone deaf our politicians are" (0.00 / 0)
I don't know how many times I've heard that nonsense when politicians vote in ways that completely contradict what the people they purport to represent want.  The message from corporate america and wall street is this:  you don't worry about the people or getting reelected.  You represent us, we are your constituency.  If you don't get reelected, well guess what?  We got you backstopped and you'll walk in to a millions of dollars a year "job" provided by us.  

This is why the netroots movement is going to fail IMO w/o the creation of a grassroots third party:  we can not backstop them and offer them millions of dollars  ... as a bribe ... if they represent us and do not get reelected.  It was only a matter of time before the two parties became hopelessly corrupted and non-responsive to the electorate.  We are at that nexus right now.  I know that it will be difficult to create a third party, although admittedly I have no idea how difficult, but otherwise you are working within the corrupted infrastructure of the democrat party and competing for intra-party power with the conduit to corporate cash, the dlc.  We have to go outside of that ... I don't think any other way will work.  

There is a time element involved here also that seems to be largely unappreciated by the progressive movement.  It will simply take too long to root out all the stronger forces within the party and the neutralizing forces within both the democratic and republican parties.  It will take way too long and we are already subjects as it is with the financial fascists that control these parties robbing us by the moment.  And their government is becoming increasingly authoritative and our civil rights are eroding by the moment as well.

So unless you want to go continue being relegated to club status and to continue to fund the absurdities of non-representation, we need to begin the work of forming a third party ... and soon.  Or else hope everything works out well with a revolution.

Z  


Alternative Parties are not enough (0.00 / 0)
Like a good garden or farm you have to prepare the soil first. In politics, "soil" = "system". We have a 2 party system. The best result you can hope for is to destroy and replace one or both of the MSP, unless and until you want to set about changing the system so that our political soil can support multiple parties.

Both MSP are weak at the moment and that may be the opportunity. But you've got to cut the cord and ditch the Democratic Party. Can you do that?

"It sounds wrong...
     ...but its right."


[ Parent ]
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