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Bloodletting on Wall Street
There were two noteworthy episodes last week in the continuing drama surrounding the housing market meltdown. First, the New York Times did the arithmetic and found that the Wall Street banks had already written down debts that amounted to almost half of their profits in their boom years from 2004 through the first half of 2007.
The other big item was that two Bear Stearns hedge fund managers were marched off to jail, charged with fraud and other related offences. According to the public accounts, these managers were extolling the virtues of their funds to customers, while at the same time in private emails to each other they were writing that the funds were about to be wiped out.
My guess is that the bloodletting is far from over. Much of the other half of the Wall Street profits will be gone by the end of the year. Also, many more Wall Street big shots will surely be doing the perp walk before the story reaches its conclusion.
This raises many questions about Wall Street and the economy. First, since so much of bank profits were illusory, the story about profits in the economy is somewhat different than we had thought. There really was no profit boom in this decade. In fact, true profit shares of GDP were almost certainly less in this cycle than in the 1990s. This means that the upward redistribution that prevented most workers from getting much benefit from productivity growth over the last decade went exclusively to high-end workers, not corporate profits.
I will have more to say in future columns about profit shares in the economy; this is a very important issue. But Wall Street's vanishing profit syndrome tells us much about the current state of the relationship between stockholders and top executives.
Remember, the business ideology of the last quarter century was that the shareholder is king. Everything must be done to maximise shareholder value. If this means massive layoffs or shutting factories that had supported a local economy for decades, so be it.
However, we have just seen the top managers of many major Wall Street banks take their shareholders for a huge ride. These are people who got annual compensation packages that always ran into the millions of dollars and often the tens of millions of dollars.
What did these high salaries get the shareholders? If you bought shares of Citigroup back in early 2004, you would have paid close to $50 a share. The stock now sells for less than $20, a loss of more than 60%, before adjusting for inflation. A share of Merrill Lynch stock sold for close to $60 in 2004. It now sells for close to $36, a loss of 40%. And Bear Stearns - we won't talk about Bear Stearns.
The point is that top executives have managed to wrest control of companies away from shareholders so that they can earn huge compensation packages regardless of their performance. This is an economy-wide problem. There are incompetent managers at the top of many companies, all of whom can count on compensation well into the seven figures, even as they run their companies into the ground.
However, the problem is worst on Wall Street. The compensation is higher and the performance is poorer. Furthermore, because of the central role of finance in the economy, the failings of the Wall Street crew are likely to have greater economy-wide ramifications than ineptitude in most other sectors.
There are no easy remedies here. Clearly we need a new regulatory structure to make it more difficult for the bankers to leverage the economy to the edge of disaster. But with the Wall Street crew completely dominating the debate over regulation, we have little reason to hope for serious reform.
In the absence of a major regulator overhaul, there is one simple measure that would at least ensure that the public gets a cut of the action. A modest financial transactions tax could easily raise an amount equal to 1% of GDP, or $150bn a year at present. This is real money - enough to finance a 10% across-the-board reduction in the income tax.
A tax of 0.25% on a stock trade or 0.02% on the purchase of credit default swap will have no measurable impact on productive financial transactions, but will likely put a serious dent in speculative activity. For this reason, it is a win-win-win proposition. It reduces speculation, it takes a big bite out of Wall Street revenue and profits and it raises a bucket of money. If anyone has any better ideas, they are keeping them to themselves.
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18 Comments so far
Show AllYes, lets all vote democrat. Let's watch as Obama fills his advisory cabinet with good old friedman followers from the chicago school. He's got a great head start and I'm just POSITIVE that this means change IS coming....
Folks, I know I swore to stay out of presidential politics and concentrate on local stuff, BUT, hasn't anyone figured out that the only change coming with this 2 party system is who's screwing us? Yes, the faces of those who are screwing the american taxpayer will change, but the the fact that we're getting f**ked will not.
I know, I KNOW everyone is sick to death of Nader, but a viable third party is about all that has even a chance of saving us, and a slim chance at that,
Ok, there, I've said enough. Now I'm going to go campaign for Pollina, the third party candidate for Gov. in Vermont. At this point, if they ran Attila the Hun as a third party candidate he'd get my vote. Anything to end the duopoly.
Andersdl,
Quite right about the deregulation. One of the key laws under FDR was Glass-Steagall, which instituted FDIC insurance, reserve requirements, and general separation of commercial banks and investment firms (ostensibly to curb speculation). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass-Steagall_Act
So how did we get all these CDOs being traded as though they were "real" securities? For that matter, why were investment banks involved in repacking of (low quality) mortgages in the first place? Well, in 1999 Clinton (yes, Clinton) signed into law the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act that repealed Glass-Steagall and let the shenanigans get started. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gramm-Leach-Bliley_Act
This crap was predictable, as surely as the greed that would (eventually) drive Wall Street to take too many risks.
"gdebs June 23rd, 2008 6:36 pm
The rich love sales taxes. Lots of stock sell every day. Great idea."
Another excellent idea!
I have an idea. Why is there no 'progressives' pushing for a Citizens' Dividend? With our land base, water, air, timber, EM spectrum, etc, we could rebate every adult citzen the equivalent of approximately 30k/year at our current level of production. This money would be generated by simply nationalizing all natural resources (resources that we cannot make but are a product of natural processes), charging lease fees to companies that want to sell us products and services based on these resources and then rebating the money to all adult citizens, regardless of class, race, etc.
Before anyone squawks about it, Alaska with their Oil dividend is already doing something like this. Natural resources are a birthright of every person, not commodities or property. As such, no person (or corporation) should have monopoly control over these things.
Personally, all the arguments over living wages and social safety nets don't touch the heart of the issue. The problem is a safe and equitable redistribution of the wealth hoarded by capitalists. This solution seems to benefit everyone in that it doesn't take the profits of the capitalists. They pay their lease fees and can use the resources as they will to make the money they can make. It benefits the people because even if we are unemployed by jobs leaving or automation, we still can have the means to live.
I'm not an expert so any errors in my proposal are my own but, this is an idea who's time has come. The push for full employment only increases the drive to overheat and push our resources to the limit. By having a citizens council oversee the fund, we can adjust the lease rates to protect our environment while maximizing the resources available for development. What do you guys think?
PS: visit http://www.progress.org/dividend/ for a great proposal on a possible means to fund a Citizens' Dividend.
A side note to my previous post:
If the fund isn't adjusted for inflation, we're screwed. That has to be built in. This way the bankers can't eat away at the value of the CD using the Fed's printing press.
Capitalism of this sort will go down eventualy, the same way communism did. In both cases the destruction starts in the core and only rapid expansion can hide it. Once you run out of space to expand it goes to hell, the only question is how quickly and to what it will change...
"Clearly we need a new regulatory structure..."
A NEW one? Any regulatory structure at all would be a plus.
CJM June 23rd, 2008 4:32 pm
"Clearly we need a new regulatory structure…"
"A NEW one? Any regulatory structure at all would be a plus."
Great comment and oh so true.
yeah we need more regulation but 0.25% of a stock purchase most of the time would amount to ten times the brokerage fee I pay in my account. If those fees are for the big boys buying and selling blocks of stocks and derivatives over $1M and the cost of those mega transactions is not some how passed on down to me the small consumer/buyer of stocks I say "fine".
The rich love sales taxes. Lots of stock sell every day. Great idea.
Financial industry regulation enacted as part of FDR's New Deal in the 1930s resulted in the prevention of financial crisis and eliminated taxpayer-funded financial industry bailouts until deregulation started during the Reagan Regime in the 1980s.
Since the 1980s we have experienced a series of financial crisis caused by deregulation. The US government's solution for each crisis was more deregulation which resulted in each succeeding crisis being worse than the previous crisis.
Although the token financial industry "regulation" and arrests we are witnessing in 2008 are good theatrics, they will not even slow down financial industry corruption and theft. Only a return to New Deal financial industry regulation will solve any financial industry problems.
Here's another option: salary caps, just like in pro sports.
Let's say, no "manager" or CEO or whatever may earn more than - let's be generous - $50 million per year total compensation. That would eliminate the bullshit argument that said executives must be paid ridiculous sums in order to keep them from switching teams for more cash.
Then add a performance bonus clause - if you do well, you get a percentage of your well-doing. If you suck, if you lie, cheat, steal - you're fined and/or kicked off the team.
If the whole team sucks, they're kicked out of the league.
Any team that violates the salary cap - penalized harshly.
Remember when meritocracy wasn't a dirty word?
I don't give a rat's behind about how many deregulated fat cats are marched off to jail. It doesn't help me or you. What I care about is regulation that prevents excess in the first place.
If you can find any examples of Republicans enacting such regs, please state them here. Otherwise, please vote Democratic. You do not get FDR or RFK without first electing them to office.
frank, I've found myself silently agreeing with you a lot and silently disagreeing with you occasionally, but this is the first time I've ever thought of you as being too generous to the owner class.
Not that that matters, but it was amusing to me, and I thought I'd share.
Here's a good one!
I was typing my comments when out-of-the-blue my keyboard froze and everything disappeared before I had an opportunity to finish and submit them. Before the freeze, the hourglass appeared and I somehow got sent back to Common Dreams Home page.
Does anyone have a clue how this happened?
Resources belong to all life on earth! They should be considered an asset in our big accounting equation.
dablackanarch: Very interesting proposal. I wonder if water should also be considered a natural resource (something we have taken for granted for too long now), because of the danger of droughts as a consequence of global warming. (That sounds bizarre this week, as we've watched the midwest rivers floods millions of acres, but there has been, for instance, a multi-year drought in the Southeast.)
Good to read about the Citizens Dividend from "natural rents". I'm the guy who coined the term, now so long ago. There is some political movement, if anyone wants to get on board. Email me at jjs@geonomics.org. Ciao.