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Nationalize the Banks! We're all Swedes Now
The U.S. banking system is close to being insolvent, and unless we want to become like Japan in the 1990s -- or the United States in the 1930s -- the only way to save it is to nationalize it.
As free-market economists teaching at a business school in the heart of the world's financial capital, we feel downright blasphemous proposing an all-out government takeover of the banking system. But the U.S. financial system has reached such a dangerous tipping point that little choice remains. And while Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner's recent plan to save it has many of the right elements, it's basically too late.
The subprime mortgage mess alone does not force our hand; the $1.2 trillion it involves is just the beginning of the problem. Another $7 trillion -- including commercial real estate loans, consumer credit-card debt and high-yield bonds and leveraged loans -- is at risk of losing much of its value. Then there are trillions more in high-grade corporate bonds and loans and jumbo prime mortgages, whose worth will also drop precipitously as the recession deepens and more firms and households default on their loans and mortgages.
Last year we predicted that losses by U.S. financial institutions would hit $1 trillion and possibly go as high as $2 trillion. We were accused of exaggerating. But since then, write-downs by U.S. banks have passed the $1 trillion mark, and now institutions such as the International Monetary Fund and Goldman Sachs predict losses of more than $2 trillion.
But if you think that $2 trillion is high, consider our latest estimates at the financial Web site RGE Monitor: They suggest that total losses on loans made by U.S. banks and the fall in the market value of the assets they are holding will reach about $3.6 trillion. The U.S. banking sector is exposed to half that figure, or $1.8 trillion. Even with the original federal bailout funds from last fall, the capital backing the banks' assets was only $1.4 trillion, leaving the U.S. banking system about $400 billion in the hole.
Two important parts of Geithner's plan are "stress testing" banks by poring over their books to separate viable institutions from bankrupt ones and establishing an investment fund with private and public money to purchase bad assets. These are necessary steps toward a healthy financial sector.
But unfortunately, the plan won't solve our financial woes, because it assumes that the system is solvent. If implemented fairly for current taxpayers (i.e., no more freebies in the form of underpriced equity, preferred shares, loan guarantees or insurance on assets), it will just confirm how bad things really are.
Nationalization is the only option that would permit us to solve the problem of toxic assets in an orderly fashion and finally allow lending to resume. Of course, the economy would still stink, but the death spiral we are in would end.
Nationalization -- call it "receivership" if that sounds more palatable -- won't be easy, but here is a set of principles for the government to go by:
First -- and this is by far the toughest step -- determine which banks are insolvent. Geithner's stress test would be helpful here. The government should start with the big banks that have outside debt, and it should determine which are solvent and which aren't in one fell swoop, to avoid panic. Otherwise, bringing down one big bank will start an immediate run on the equity and long-term debt of the others. It will be a rough ride, but the regulators must stay strong.
Second, immediately nationalize insolvent institutions. The equity holders will be wiped out, and long-term debt holders will have claims only after the depositors and other short-term creditors are paid off.
Third, once an institution is taken over, separate its assets into good ones and bad ones. The bad assets would be valued at current (albeit depressed) values. Again, as in Geithner's plan, private capital could purchase a fraction of those bad assets. As for the good assets, they would go private again, either through an IPO or a sale to a strategic buyer.
The proceeds from both these bad and good assets would first go to depositors and then to debt-holders, with some possible sharing with the government to cover administrative costs. If the depositors are paid off in full, then the government actually breaks even.
Fourth, merge all the remaining bad assets into one enterprise. The assets could be held to maturity or eventually sold off with the gains and risks accruing to the taxpayers.
The eventual outcome would be a healthy financial system with many new banks capitalized by good assets. Insolvent, too-big-to-fail banks would be broken up into smaller pieces less likely to threaten the whole financial system. Regulatory reforms would also be instituted to reduce the chances of costly future crises.
Nationalizing banks is not without precedent. In 1992, the Swedish government took over its insolvent banks, cleaned them up and reprivatized them. Obviously, the Swedish system was much smaller than the U.S. system. Moreover, some of the current U.S. financial institutions are significantly larger and more complex, making analysis difficult. And today's global capital markets make gaming the system easier than in 1992. But we believe that, if applied correctly, the Swedish solution will work here.
Sweden's restructuring agency was not an out-of-control bureaucracy; it delegated all the details of the cleanup to private bankers and managers hired by the government. The process was remarkably smooth.
Basically, we're all Swedes now. We have used all our bullets, and the boogeyman is still coming. Let's pull out the bazooka and be done with it.
- Posted in



22 Comments so far
Show AllForgive me, but my attempt to express the irony goes as follows:
The government has turned out to be the solution to all the problems we created by treating government as the problem.
You get the 2009 Nobel Prize for Irony.
(We ask that you not cash the check right away).
Don't nationalize the banks. Let those elitist rackets die. Let the society adapt to life without them. Take their office space and use it to house the operations of a new enterprise to calculate the full costs of production to put into the retail prices. This will require a lot of work, will require a lot of office space, and will require funding out of the Pentagon budget, through the elimination of several military programs, including the F-22, the defense shield, and 20% of overseas bases, including in Iraq/Afghanistan. Full costs in retail prices enable the people to leverage their economic motivations to serve their social, ethical, spiritual needs. Let the banks die. We need their office space.
rtdrury--Help me through this sentence of yours: "Take their office space and use it to house the operations of a new enterprise to calculate the full costs of production to put into the retail prices." Are you talking about replacing the financial institutions with financial institutions? Public or private?
I'm sorry, but I don't think banks should die. They are too vital to the operation of a complex economy like ours. In fact, that's a good reason for nationalizing them. If people, not corporations, are to have power exercised through money, then the people must have, through their government, control of the banks. This is the key to the government being of the people, not of the corporations.
"The eventual outcome would be a healthy financial system..."
Not true. The financial system's success is always predicated on the growth of some other industry, or of the economy as a whole. It is in itself non-productive and parasitic on real productivity, real industry. What is implied here is that the bankers have some new bubble of phantom wealth they're going to promote as the basis of the "new economy", since they're obviously not talking about ceasing the ongoing policy of exporting our manufacturing base. So we're going to go down the same path as before with the dotcom bubble, the housing bubble, the "innovative investment instruments" bubble. In other words, there will be no re-creation of strong domestic industry and money will continue to be defined by debt, which will continue to grow.
Notice the economists are still not talking about the Federal Reserve, the private for-profit purveyor of debt-based interest-laden currency. I don't believe there will be a permanent solution until the Fed is eliminated.
Well said! The emphasis of growth is omnipresent driven by 'interest-laden currency'. So true.
The quantification of debt wrongfully applies the algebraic concept of exponential growth - compounding interest - upon money. The distinction between usury and interest is an arbitrary legal determination with no basis in mathematics. Nothing can grow forever at an ever-increasing rate. As time moves on, the emphasis of ever-increasing growth becomes omnipresent, is quantified and institutionalized in the societal structure, encouraging over consumption, over development, and excessive expectations, pushing economic stress to its upper limit of expansion, eventually inciting conflict and spawning War to insure growth.
Economic systems of capitalism, communism, socialism, imperialism, colonialism, totalitarianism, fascism, nazism, monarchism, corporatism, and all other centralist monetary-isms maintain the monopolized control of money, and hence the control of society itself, through their own brand of Legal Tender that excludes other forms of money from the Market.
Interesting that there are 3 articles today in CommonDreams about nationalizing the banks. Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.
http://theformofmoney.blogharbor.com/blog/_archives/2005/9/18/1236759.html
The banks should be permanently nationalized and not reprivatized (unless we want this crisis to happen all over again).
Those big banks that were too big to fail need to be broken up as part of any final settlement and the banking industry needs to shrink back to the size of about 30 years ago. The re-regulation needs to start with the repeal of the Commodities Modernization Act of 2000, which was written by Enron lawyers and sponsored by Senator Phil Graham. Also repeal the Graham,Leach,Bliley Bill which repealed the Glass-Steagell Act from the 1930's. Put a 1/4 of 1% tax on every trade on the stock market like the Brits and this would slow down the wild program trading. Scrap or greatly change the authority of the FED to intervene in financial messes. The FED has bought up trillions of dollars worth of bad debt from the investment banks without any oversight and refuse to say who they bought from, how much, or at what discount on the bad loans. They have also given holding bank status to corporations such as American Express so they could borrow from the TARP funds. Read "What Cooked the World's Economy" and then break out the tar, feathers and pitchforks and lets go hunt New York bankers.Get really pi##ed and contact your members of Congress and hope they are willing to swing a mighty sharp hatchet when it comes to re-regulating the banking industry in this country. The taxpayers should not have to bail out the stockholders or managers of banks that took risks that were bound to fail. It's scary that Tim Geithner was chosen as Treasury Secretary when he was a protege of Robert Rubin who helped get us into this mess.
In this time of mainly electronic money unsupported by any unit of commodity or directly usable goods, banks are infra-structure and should be public, non-profit and transparent in operation.
Like public roads.
Alan MacDonald
Using the evasive, guileful, and even propagandistic phrase "nationalization of the banks" (or financial sector) is an extreme media disservice, distortion, and even deceit of the American people.
Instead of this fear/scare term 'nationalization of banks', a truthful and truly democratic media would use the honest term, "democratization of the banking system".
The bottom line is that the banking system is now one of unchallenged, unelected, and ruthless EMPIRE, and it must be brought into the service of 'the people' under the control of our indivisible democracy --- just as every aspect of our political, social and economic lives, as free and voluntary members of a self-governing democracy entails of all spheres of our shared lives --- except for the separate and non-interfering sphere of religion, as defined in our Constitution.
A free and democratically representative Republic of self-governing people can not allow an uncontrolled Empire to exist within its Republic --- else Franklin's greatest concern will come true, "We have our Republic now, if we can keep it (from Empire)"
Never going to happen. The elites will protected and a few crumbs will tossed to the rabble. Just because Obama was elected doesn't mean all the power or even most of it is his hands. The Rethugs still hold most of the economic high ground and as we can see they have no intention of helping end the downward spiral.
Correct. The good thing is, the politicians and their corporate overlords are helping to foster the revolt that they would be better off trying to avoid. That's why FDR did the New Deal - he told the rich guys it would keep the hoi polloi from really getting riled.
There should be a New Global TradeMark reserved for the USA:
"MADE IN USA ..WARNING!!!...HIGHLY TOXIC".
"free market capitalism?" WARNING highly toxic, Made iN USA
"deregulation" -- MADE IN USA -- HIGHLY TOXIC
"Best health care in the world: USA system" WARNING, HIGHLY TOXIC
"best Education in the world : Made in USA" WARNING, HIGHLY TOXIC
add other items on your SHOPPING CART. World....if you LIKE TOXIC....
Nationalizing the banks must include the Federal Reserve Bank. The government of the people can run our banking system, better and less expensively.
You people, including the author of the article, make me want to laugh;
1. Sweden (Nowadays referred to as "Little Sweden, our 51st state" due to it´s corporate interest regime slathering and crawling on it´s criminal belly for all it is worth to the likes of the mass murdering criminals who control American society instead of upholding it´s own laws against export of arms and arms manufactures to warring states...The US of Nothing is now it´s 2nd largest buyer. Sweden does not make wars, it PROFITS FROM THE DEATH OF THE INNOCENT. Do I really need to remind you about WWII?) is a genuine s..thole of a place these days, looking more like a third rate banana republic everyday with no end in sight.
In case you hadn´t bothered to notice, the place is on the ropes economically, is a xenophobic, provincial backwater, and it has few if any options, being a small and rather inconsequential society in global terms on any level, economic or otherwise.
The so called leaders here follow the tune of their masters, the western corporate criminal cartel. Mona Sahlin herself is a member of the Bilderberg Group...
2. The entirely ludicrous conception that "democratic" banks could be created in a society that operates on the barbarian principle of dog-eat-dog aka known as "capitalism", (an affront in and of itself to human reason,) is a broken reed better left untried, let alone spoken, at the risk of being seen as an abject fool with little knowledge of the actual level of criminal deceit that temporarily rules this planet.
A far better social impulse would perhaps be to...burn down all the banks. Destroy the paradigm and force the issue. I agree with those who can see further than their own gorge, it is comforting that the enemy to human brotherhood is too stupid to realize that the more they struggle the more obvious they and their criminal schemes become. Obvious to even the most bloated western consumer who lives on cheap credit that cannot be repaid reasonably, slop food, lousy products imported from 3rd rate foreign manufacturers with little or no consumer safeguards, and moronic "entertainment".
You want change you can believe in?
Be it.
Destroy the paradigm and take the risk of building something new, from the ground up. What have you got to lose? Your credit rating? Or your chains?
"He who hesitates is lost..."
An apt definition of Swedish "leadership" if I ever heard one. Trust me when I say, from personal and lengthy experience, Americans are not yet "Swedes".
It seems that a privatized financial system is like a privatized education system: constantly at risk of finding that the easiest way to make a profit is to prey on the children (or small depositors/taxpayers). Actually, and here's some irony, I believe in privatizing the education system. It's just that government oversight has to be huge to prevent such abuses.
Through its function of passing laws and enforcing them, government creates markets that private enterprise can serve. We see now what happens when government creates such markets and then walks away from them. I don't know all the intricacies, but I think the authors are right.
GM builds cars, GE builds lightbulbs, what do banks build? Valuations. They assign risk and reward to ventures. Total government control of such a function could be bad, like government designing automobiles (OK, bad example).
Here is an excellent article by Ellen Brown, author of "Web of Debt."
SUSTAINABLE GOVERNMENT: BANKING FOR A “NEW” NEW DEAL
http://www.webofdebt.com/articles/newdeal.php
Granting private banks the authority to create money out of thin air, whenever a loan is taken out, money that is backed by the "full faith of the United States Government," is granting huge authority that, by the Constitution, resides with Congress. This unconstitutional authority allows private banks to amass great wealth and wield huge power, shaping national and world events. What we are seeing now, with the private banks, is the end of a 300-year Ponzi scheme, according to Brown, that is Fractional Reserve Lending, which depends on an infinite cycle of increased borrowing to fund the interest on the loans.
Federalizing the Fed and nationalizing the banks, modeled after a system supported by Benjamin Franklin in Pennsylvania, i.e., only allowing national banks to create money, backed by the "full faith of the US Govt," would put the power of money creation back in the hands of the people and allow the profit of banking (i.e., reaonsable and predictable interest on loans) to fund the government in lieu of an income tax.
I highly recommend reading Ellen Brown's, "Web of Debt." It's a well-documented explanation of the ominous roll private banks have played in the history of our country and the world.
Thank you, AnnT, for your explanation and recommended reading.
Yes, nationalize. And nationalize energy as well. Instead of enriching CEO's, the revenue generated could support the Treasury. Anything left over could be issued as dividends. This would eliminate income taxes and render the IRS obsolete. We'd all have more money in our pockets. Then we'd have something extra to spend so we could afford to go down to the local music store and buy that Fender or Steinway we've been dreaming about. This would save downtown, our mortgages and our sanity.
We desperately need to nationalize the privately owned banking system, including the Federal Reserve.
Because privately owned banks can only lend money into the economy, money that must be repaid with interest that is not created by any legal institution, not the US government, not the Federal Reserve nor the banks themselves, paying this required interest out of the money supply, leaving insufficient to repay their loans, causing the entire financial system to become unstable; such a system cannot provide a stable currency needed to grow a sustainable economy
Private banks cannot operate without government endorsement. Without delegated government authority, currency issued by private banks would not be backed by the law enforcement and legal systems of the nation, any more than ‘price off coupons’ issued by a local store would have the status of ‘legal tender’ for all debt.
Only a government owned, public banking system, has the authority, power and flexibility to provide a stable currency. Government currency is legal tender. Government banks can issue and lend money just like a private bank. Only government can create and spend money directly into the economy to offset interest payment on loans, avoiding the chronic shortage of money inherent in the private banking system. Only government can adjust its spending to provide additional currency for population and economic growth. Only government can adjust tax policy to fine-tune the money supply and regulate the growth of the economy.
In a public banking system, the benefit of money creation would accrue to the citizens of the nation. Direct public spending could build physical infrastructures, provide free public health care, provide free education, provide low interest housing loans and helping to rebuild our cities. Interest paid on loans would be returned to the treasury, eliminating the need for most taxes, including the income tax. Nationalizing the Federal Reserve, America’s privately owned central bank, would allow a painless way to pay the national debt. By substituting government issued currency for government issued bonds, the debt could be paid without causing inflation or reducing the value of people’s savings. Bonds and currency are both forms of money, the difference is the interest paid on bonds, substituting currency for bonds simply eliminate the interest. The value of someone’s holding would not change: $10,000 in bonds is equal to $10,000 in cash minus the interest.
A public baking system, like the public highway system, is not a socialist takeover plot. Operating under the control of elected representatives, government supplied money would serve the needs and interest of individual citizens, businesses and nonprofit organizations with less interference than private banks controlled by inaccessible corporate boards of directors.