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Bernanke Must Go
Ben Bernanke has been an abysmal failure as chairman of the US Federal Reserve. I'm voting against his reappointment
Last year, the American people overwhelmingly voted for a change in our national priorities and for a new direction on the economy. After eight long years of trickle-down economics that benefitted millionaires and billionaires while leaving the middle class behind, Americans demanded a change that would put the interests of ordinary people ahead of the greed of Wall Street and the wealthy few.
What the American people did not bargain for was another four years for one of the key architects of the Bush economy.
Before Ben Bernanke became the Fed chairman in 2006, he headed the council of economic advisers for President Bush – one of the most right-wing presidents in American history. He also sat on the Fed board of governors from 2002 to 2005. Perhaps more than anyone else, Bernanke was in a position to diagnose the impending economic disaster and take steps to stop it. Tragically, not only did he fail to prevent the economic collapse that we have experienced, he did not even warn the American people that it was coming until it was too late. Equally distressing, his actions since the crisis began may leave taxpayers holding the bag for an even bigger bailout in the future.
As chairman of the Federal Reserve, Bernanke has four main responsibilities: (1) to conduct monetary policy in a way that leads to maximum employment and stable prices; (2) to maintain the safety and soundness of financial institutions; (3) to contain systemic risk in financial markets; and (4) to protect consumers against deceptive and unfair financial products.
By any sober assessment of the facts, Bernanke has been an abysmal failure in all four of these areas.
Since Bernanke took over as Fed chairman, the unemployment rate has more than doubled and, today, an incredible 17% of the American workforce is either unemployed or underemployed.
Not since the Great Depression has the financial system been as unsafe, unsound, and unstable as it has been during Bernanke's tenure. More than 120 banks have failed since he became chairman, despite the Fed's army of nearly 3,000 bank supervisors with broad powers to maintain the safety and soundness of financial institutions.
Under Bernanke's watch, the value of risky derivatives held at our nation's top commercial banks grew from $110tn to more than $290tn, 95 per cent of which are concentrated in just five financial institutions. While Bernanke was asleep at the wheel, Warren Buffett, as early as 2003, called derivatives "financial weapons of mass destruction" and warned that they posed a "mega-catastrophic risk" to the economy.
Bernanke failed to prevent banks from issuing deceptive and unfair financial products to consumers. Under his leadership, mortgage lenders were allowed to issue predatory loans they knew consumers could not afford to repay. This risky practice was allowed to continue even though the FBI warned in 2004 of an "epidemic" in mortgage fraud that had the potential to become "the next S&L crisis".
After the financial crisis hit, Bernanke's response was to provide trillions of dollars in virtually zero-interest loans and other taxpayer assistance to some of the largest financial institutions in the world. Adding insult to injury, Bernanke has refused to tell the American people the names of the institutions that received this handout or the terms involved. Trillions of taxpayer dollars are at risk and Mr Bernanke continues to hide the names!
Further, despite the American people spending $700bn bailing out huge financial institutions because they were "too-big-to-fail," Bernanke has allowed three of the four largest financial institutions in the country to become even larger than they were before the financial collapse.
In the midst of a horrendous economic crisis that has caused massive suffering in this country Bernanke had the opportunity to force irresponsible and corrupt Wall Street firms to change their ways. The chairman could have demanded that Wall Street provide adequate credit to small businesses to create decent-paying jobs. He could have insisted that bailed-out banks end the usurious practice of charging interest rates of 30% or higher on credit cards. He could have required bailed out banks to stop making risky bets in derivatives. He could have required bailed-out-banks to modify mortgages so that homeowners could afford to stay in their homes. He could have required too-big-to-fail banks become smaller. He could have instituted a major investigation of how the financial collapse occurred in the first place, and held chief executives at those banks accountable.
Instead, Wall Street, with Bernanke's help, has instituted a system of "heads they win, tails taxpayers lose". If Wall Street wins, their executives receive millions in bonuses and they keep all of their profits. If Wall Street loses, taxpayers bail them out, and their executives still keep their bonuses.
As the middle class of this country continues to suffer, we need a chairman of the Fed who is more concerned about expanding the productive economy – increasing decent-paying jobs for all Americans – than continuing to fan the flames of Wall Street greed that precipitated this crisis.

16 Comments so far
Show All"By any sober assessment of the facts, Bernanke has been an abysmal failure in all four of these areas."
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Keep on truckin', Senator Sanders, and more power to you.
But what's a "sober assessment of the facts" got to do, got to do with it?
You know as well as I do that it's all about the benjamins, and that Truthy Factoids have long since crowded out "facts" and rendered "sober assessment" utterly impotent.
Why do you insist on putting one foot in front of the other when you've got an all-expenses-paid, first-class seat reserved on the Amerikan Duopoly Pragmatic Express?
You could be reclining in a comfy seat in the VIP Club Car, schmoozing with the political aristocracy, and occasionally smiling and waving out the window to the Little People clustered adoringly along the track bed.
In this No Bankster Left Behind maladministration, rest assured that the fix is in for "made men" like Bernanke. He's not going anywhere.
I can already hear the liberal-lite mice scratching behind the woodwork, allowing that Bernanke may not be PERFECT, but that it's not such a bad thing that he's being kept on board. After all, they posit, it's not like Bernanke is getting a free ride; he'll be sternly "tasked" to finally clean up the economic mess he and his criminal cohort have made.
In this precarious economy, the LAST thing our Elected Misrepresentatives want to do is deprive banksters and generals of their LIVELIHOOD! Dontcha SEE?
I give you credit for your continued homages to Reason, though. It was a pretty nice Enlightenment we had once, wasn't it?
· Yr Obd't Servant
I would also add that the poor people are in need of help, not just the middle class (Oh wait, the middle class votes and that is why the focus is on them. Don't need to mention the poor).
I usually agree with Bernie (not always, I can't feel confident on where he is coming from all the time), but in this case he hits the mark, Bernanke, and any other "Alan Greenspan/promote business at all costs" type candidate should not be considered. We need someone who is protecting the economy rather than business interests.
Oh wait, that will never happen. Silly me.
It doesn't matter who the Fed chairperson is, all the failings that Sanders pins on Bernanke really arise from the nature of the Fed itself. The Fed itself should be eliminated.
The number one "deceptive and unfair financial product" is of course the Federal Reserve Note; the tokens for units of our privatized currency that are created by debt subject to interest.
As long as monetary policy is created by private central bankers for the benefit of private central bankers, shuffling Fed chairpersons will be like moving deck chairs on the Titanic; the economics of privately controlled central banking is all about massive, systematic upward movement and centralization of wealth. As long as our monetary system continues to be based on a currency created by debt subject to interest, it will be characterized by self-perpetuating and self-multiplying debt, eventually reaching terminal debt and monetary collapse.
End the Fed.
That is a better idea though technically changing the fed chairman could slow down the dangerous nature of the Fed.
Hm. And changing pilots in a stealth bomber will "slow down the dangerous nature" of the aircraft? NOT!
No, this is just another transparent token gesture of change which will do nothing but perpetuate the status quo. It's not the chairman that needs to go; it's the institution.
Sen. Sanders --
What you justly criticize Bernanke for, applies a hundred fold to the president who just renominated him.
I hope you'll make this point clear in your next public statement.
You might then get, like Rep. Conyers did, a personal call from President Obama complaining that you're demeaning him.
Come on, Bernie, don't be afraid.
Being demeaned by honest congresspersons is exactly what Obama needs to feel.
Bernie sanders as it right again Bernanke is getting it all wrong as did Greenspan.I remember when he stood in front of congress and told them we have to cut taxes because the surplice is to big. So it seems to me nobody at the fed as the the interest of the average guy we need to take them over YES NATIONALIZE it
There are so many candidates this Holiday Season for Anti-Christ, must I add Bernanke to the list?
Yesterday former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker told a stunned audience of financiers that the single most important financial innovation of the last 25 years has been automatic teller machines.
Mr. Volcker then proceeded to point out that the economy grew at a greater rate of speed in the 60's, before "innovative" products like mortgage backed securities and swaps.
Banking must return to the mundane, boring and far-less profitable aim of making loans to those who can produce value for their community.
Complicated trading and convoluted securities backed by garbage insurance schemes contribute NOTHING of worth to society.
They only enrich con-men posing as bankers while jeopardizing everyone else.
“I wish someone would give me one shred of neutral evidence that financial innovation has led to economic growth — one shred of evidence", said Mr. Volcker.
We're still waiting.
The Bank called US Bank is the new love child of these immoral Bastards.
I am not sure if anyone else has read the reports, but some banks who are well in the bank are being dissolved and the assets are being handed over to US Bank - Four of them in California.
Why is this?
Love
Zero
I watched some of Bernakes testimony ( is this a pun or what) the other day while running on a treadmill ( I felt like a caged rat). This guy spoke in finely tuned Orwellian/Bu$hite speak about how if he hadn't done what he did last fall we'd be in a depression right now. Really Ben what do think were in right now? For Ben and his Wall st. and DC pals its boom time for the rest of us its the Great fucking Depression 2. Thanks Ben for saving us... u fucker.
Listen to this interview with Joe Stigliz in the NewYorker back in September, especially beginning around 10:25 into it. He says exactly what Bernie is saying now. The fact is that Bernanke, far from failing to implement 'socialist ideals' or pandering to 'populist outrage', has been breaking all the conventional rules of market economies by failing to provide oversight, implementing bad incentives, making lousy deals for the government and failing to provide transparency. That Bernie has to stand out as an exception to general support for Bernanke among democrats is hideous!
http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/jamessurowiecki/2009/09/video-joseph-stiglitz.html
Bernanke is part of the financial elite and is unable to see how big firms can make mistakes and have to pay for them just like other people do. He and others are unwilling to tell everyone why banks are making so much money now. It is simple ~ instead of providing loans (that is their real purpose as I understand it) they are investing the stimulus money in the market which has been going up quite well. However, this should not be allowed since banks should neither be investment houses or risk our money (which is what the bank has) on risky investments. Bernanke knows that these institutions can not meet their investor demands by just being a bank and won't clip their wings so that they are real banks.
We need someone with the guts to make banks be banks. One approach might be to spin out the banks in these big firms and force them to be banks. The remaining firm would be the investment and insurance arms and can do what ever we let them do. They should be clear that if they take risks there is no government money available to bail them out.
All states should form their own banks, patterned after the Bank of North Dakota. Eliminating the Fed altogether. We need to go one step further. Establishing a 90% tax rate on any business sold to a foreign investor. We no longer have American companies, but multi-nationals, with no alligience toward the U.S.A. Other countries work hand in hand with their business community to further their countries well being. One of the most telling things about the world economy was a question asked of Agela Merkal, the German leader. She was asked why her country was doing so well in the global economy. She answered; "WE STILL MAKE THINGS".
"By any sober assessment of the facts, Bernanke has been an abysmal failure in all four of these areas."
Bernanke and the other incompetent or corrupt(?) banksters at the Federal Reserve are "in the business of fixing windows that they themselves broke". Unfortunately, it seems to be a never-ending pattern of this "private-for-profit" entity where the rich get richer and the middle class shrinks to join the numbers of the "poor".
This banking system is disconnected from the needs of Main Street and driven by their own self-centered greed.