CRA

It's a difference of views! It's a paradigm conflict! It's a marketing ploy!

by: Paul Rosenberg

Thu Dec 16, 2010 at 12:00

Yesterday, I wrote a diary, "GOPers on Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission blast Dems, Issue own 9-page lie-based 'report'", in which I focused attention on GOP commissioner's fixation on blaming the financial collapse on the Community Redevelopment Act, along with other government regulations and initiatives.  I did that because I doubted anyone else would pay as much attention as I did, given my past examination of this myth so recently.  But Barry Ritholtz has a much simpler way of dealing with it, in quick 1,000 words:

He then adds:

Pray tell what caused the same boom and bust in these other nations?

And how could Fannie/Freddie or the CRA be responsible - that only applies to the US - when you have the same, global, coordinated rise in prices?

But others have cited even more blatant signs of the partisan and ideological bias driving the GOP commissioners, and that's worth a followup comment.  Best of show is Mike Konczal, who wrote Keith Hennessey, Douglas Holtz-Eakin vote to remove phrases "Shadow Banking", "Interconnectedness", "Deregulation" from FCIC Report.  After first noting the decision to issue their own report, he writes:

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GOPers on Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission blast Dems, Issue own 9-page lie-based "report"

by: Paul Rosenberg

Wed Dec 15, 2010 at 16:30

If you believe global warming is "a hoax", then you'll love the 9-page so-called "report" of the GOP minority on the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission.  It's got that same self-righteous reality-free appeal.

So, the  Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission's report is being delayed until January--the report was originally due today--and the Republicans on the commission are siezing on the delay to pull out, issue their own micro-report (a whole 9 pages!) and blast the Democrats on the panel, accusing them of political hijinks, in typical GOP-projection style.

Shahien Nasiripour at HuffPo gives a fairly straightforward account ("Financial Crisis Panel In Turmoil As Republicans Defect; Plan To Blame Government For Crisis"), but John D. McKinnon at WSJ ("GOP Set to Issue Own Fiscal Report") and John Maggs at Poitico ("Financial crisis committee in turmoil") give more of a sense of how this is likely to be spun into typical Versailles mush, at best, and a downright disinformation fest at worst.  

McKinnon' led:

Republican members of a commission investigating the financial crisis will issue their own report Wednesday that could undermine the body's formal conclusions, the latest sign of partisan discord on the troubled panel.

In an interview Tuesday, the panel's Republican vice chairman charged his Democratic counterparts with turning their official report into a "hit piece" to foster political attacks on the financial sector and the GOP.

And Maggs':

Another bipartisan commission - this one seeking the causes of the financial crisis - is ending up deadlocked in a partisan dispute.

Republican members of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, which was supposed to complete its final report Wednesday, are preparing to issue dissenting opinions on their own in the coming days. They are unhappy that commission chairman Phil Angelides, a Democrat, has delayed the report until late January, and that he has reserved just 36 pages for dissenting opinions in a document expected to run many hundreds of pages.

The Republicans are supposedly steamed because they only get 9 pages each to raise specific objections, but are posturing as if they have no input at all into the report itself.  Of course this makes perfect sense in terms of the GOP mindset that demands 100% capitulation on all legislative matters. But when it comes a fact-finding report, not so much.

However the rationale developes a whole new level of holes when it turns out their "solution" is to produce a "report" that's just 1/4  the length of what they're complaining Angelides has limited them to.  That's much, much less space than Angelides offered them.  So why so short?  Obviously, they have no interest in presenting a detailed explanation of the crisis.  They want a short, punchy, easy-to-digest, easy-to-quote, Fox News friendly document.

Only Versailes could possibly take these jokers seriously.

But it gets even better when you look at the actual contents, such as they are.

Nasiripour's led is much more straightforward, and leads directly to a discussion of contents:

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Weekly Audit: Are Handouts For Billionaires More Important Than Feeding Children?

by: The Media Consortium

Tue Aug 17, 2010 at 10:24

by Zach Carter, Media Consortium blogger

The crazy conservative assault on government spending has become one of the most irrational economic policy debates in recent years.

 
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Weekly Audit: Depression-Era Inequality, Only Worse

by: The Media Consortium

Tue Aug 18, 2009 at 11:06

By Zach Carter, TMC MediaWire blogger

A new study by Economist Emmanuel Saez revealed this week that income inequality in the U.S. is more severe today than at any time since World War I, and the current recession is taking its heaviest toll on the worst-off members of our society. As our government rebuilds the financial sector using taxpayers' money, it's important to remember that both financiers and the government are responsible to our communities, not just bank shareholders. If we want to strengthen our country's economic foundation, we need to demand better wages for workers and an end to all kinds of predatory lending.

Saez's new data on income inequality is, as Paul Krugman put it, "truly amazing." Saez, who teaches at the University of California at Berkeley, found that the top 0.01% of U.S. earners had 6% of total U.S. wages, more than double the level in 2000. Earners in the top 10%, meanwhile, took home an astonishing 49.7% of all wages. That gap is larger now than during the Great Depression or the Gilded Age of the Roaring '20s.

"We're seeing Depression-era inequality again-only now it's slightly worse," writes Steve Benen for The Washington Monthly. Benen also notes that this level of inequality is not an inevitable consequence of a market economy: It's an extreme historical aberration. In the U.S., prosperity for much of the 20th Century was shared. But in 2007, at the economic bubble's peak, the wealthy simply got wealthier.

In that context, it is beyond absurd that the government is allowing 8-figure bonuses to be doled out by bailed out banks. Writing for Salon, Robert Reich dissects the policy implications of Citigroup's plans to pay its top executives an average of $10 million this year and award over $100 million to its top trader, a man who literally owns a castle in Germany. Citigroup was one of the most reckless U.S. banks during the housing bubble, a major subprime offender that received $45 billion in direct bailout money, as well as hundreds of billions in federal guarantees. How much is $45 billion? With the median U.S. home price at $174,100, that's the full market price of over 258,000 foreclosed homes. The company says that $10 million a head is necessary to attract and maintain top "talent," which Reich notes is a somewhat misleading term, given recent history. The problem is not just that Citigroup and other Wall Street firms are paying tons of money to a few people, it's that these people are being rewarded for the same kind of activities that got us into this mess to begin with: Risky, highly leveraged securities trading.

"Over the last several years Wall Street has exhibited a truly astonishing lack of talent," Reich says, noting that, "The Street is back to the same, relentlessly untalented tactics that made it lots of money before the meltdown-which also forced taxpayers to bail it out, caused the world economy to melt down, and tens of millions of people to lose big chunks of their life savings."

In truth, Reich argues, most large financial firms in the U.S. are much more like public utility companies than private-sector businesses. Even in good times, they depend on government guarantees and other support systems to function. In bad times, we bail them out. Instead of paying financiers tens of millions of dollars to reinforce a flawed system, Reich argues that we should impose rules that result in salaries similar to the public utilities sector, where top earners are generally restricted to 6-figure incomes.

The American Prospect features two pieces emphasizing problems in the current financial sector. Under a law known as the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), enacted in 1977 we require banks to make loans in communities where they collect deposits. The loans have to be to dependable borrowers and they have to be relatively inexpensive. The law works very well-institutions covered by it made only a tiny fraction of the high-interest subprime loans that brought down the financial sector, as National Community Reinvestment Coalition President John Taylor notes for the Prospect. But CRA only applies to actual banks. You know, the places where you deposit your paychecks. CRA does not apply to subcompanies owned by the same corporation, and it does not apply to giant Wall Street securities firms like Bear Stearns and Goldman Sachs. Taylor says we need to expand CRA to cover these other big players in the financial world.

Why? As Alyssa Katz details in a piece for the Prospect funded by The Nation Institute, many Wall Street firms are bidding on foreclosed properties and selling them at rip-off rates to low-income borrowers.

But as Mary Kane notes for The Washington Independent, banks have also devised several methods of making money without making a loan. By charging tremendous fees on borrowers for minor infractions, banks generate billions of dollars without producing anything of social value. One of the worst forms of abuse, Kane writes, comes in the form of overdraft fees. When you withdraw too much money from your bank account, the bank fronts you the money, and then charges you a fee for this "protection." The trick is, banks almost never tell you that this has occurred, and often play around with the timing of your charges and deposits to maximize the fees they collect. Banks are on track to collect $38.5 billion in such fees this year alone. The worst part is, the fees come from the poorest customers-rich people don't overdraw their bank accounts, because they have tons of money.

In the case of credit cards, banks routinely slap borrowers with outrageous fees and interest rate hikes when the borrowers are making payments on time. Over the years, banks have targeted younger and younger credit card customers, as Adam Waxman notes for WireTap. After years of declining wages for all but the wealthiest citizens, consumers have been turning to pricey plastic to finance basic necessities.

Sadly, corporate America does not seem very focused on helping workers establish their financial independence. The Real News talks with Richard Wolff, an economist with the New School who emphasizes that, while worker productivity has jumped in recent months, wages have not made the corresponding increases. Quarterly productivity numbers tend to jump around a lot, but the trend of not compensating workers for improved efficiency has been around for years.

In a consumer-driven economy, major problems can't be fixed by giving lots of money to a few people, especially if those few people are already rich. To support broad, meaningful economic growth, we need to tailor our policies that empower those on the lower rungs of the economic ladder. And when we bail out giant corporations with taxpayer money, we need to make sure those companies arrange their business to improve the lot of taxpayers.

This post features links to the best independent, progressive reporting about the economy and is free to reprint. Visit StimulusPlan.NewsLadder.net and Economy.NewsLadder.net for complete lists of articles on the economy, or follow us on Twitter. And for the best progressive reporting on critical health and immigration issues, check out Healthcare.NewsLadder.net and Immigration.NewsLadder.net. This is a project of The Media Consortium, a network of 50 leading independent media outlets, and was created by NewsLadder.

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