Last week US Treasury Secretary Henry
Paulson unveiled a dramatic plan to arrest the present financial crisis and
prevent future economic catastrophe.
The root of the problem lies in the
‘sub-prime’ (read toxic) mortgages. In the heady years of the ever-rising house
price bubble these mortgages were sold by swindlers to poor people who, they
knew perfectly well, couldn’t afford them. Then they were bundled up as
financial instruments and sold all round the world. This was described as ‘financial
innovation’. So the sub-prime mortgages became ‘assets’ that the banks could
use to lend out still more money. The trouble is, they are not assets to the
banks if the mortgagees are no longer paying because they have been evicted for
non-payment. There may be millions of sub-prime mortgages ticking away like a
time bomb below the surface of the banking system.
Many of these borrowers have already had
their homes foreclosed on. They are sleeping in cars or doubling up in trailer
parks. Frankly, who cares? Capitalism has never cared about homelessness. If
you can’t afford the goods (a roof over your head), then you can’t have them.
That’s capitalism. You have to rely on yourself, not depend on handouts from
others.
That philosophy is neo-liberalism. It has
been dominant in the capitalist world for the past 25 years. Suddenly it is stone
dead. Paulson has announced a sudden and dramatic reversal of policy. He has
presented Congress with a plan to buy up the dodgy mortgages and lodge them in
a ‘bad bank’ he calls the Resolution Trust Corporation. It’s a bail-out. The
idea is that the ‘bad bank’ should gradually acquire all the toxic mortgages
from the other banks and financial institutions. Sellafield in Cumbria
processes all the nuclear waste that is a by-product of our (totally stupid)
nuclear power programme. In the same way the Resolution Trust Corporation will
process and store the financial ‘plutonium’ and other poisonous isotopes that
have been generated by the present financial crisis.
Processing financial waste products doesn’t
sound like a way of making much money, any more than handling nuclear waste is
a way to profit. Indeed Sellafield costs us taxpayers vast sums of money.
Naturally Paulson has pencilled in the US taxpayer to stump up the requisite
cash. It’s likely to cost – wait for it – $700bn. If he gets away with it,
Paulson will have the capitalist world in the end returned to its natural
harmony, with the private banks making all the profits and the taxpayers
holding all the losses.
It sounds like a breathtaking break from
neo-liberal philosophy. It’s not really. Neo-liberalism was always a giant lie.
Homeless people don’t matter. People in danger of losing their jobs in a
recession don’t matter. But, when it comes to banks and billionaires,
self-reliance is for the birds. These people are hapless bums. As Michael
Roberts wrote a few days ago, “Most of the money (for the Paulson plan) will go
to help the fat cats of Wall Street get out of their mess. You see, when it comes down to the impending
collapse of capitalism, suddenly socialism is a good idea. It’s just this is socialism for the rich,
while the rest of us have to continue to live under capitalism.” (https://communist.red/socialism-rich-capitalism-poor.htm
)
Two weeks ago Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,
the giant mortgage insurance companies, were effectively nationalised. The US
government effectively took over responsibility $5.3trn (yes, trillion) in mortgages.
Then insurance behemoth AIG was nationalised for another $85bn. Effectively
Paulson has socialised the entire US mortgage asset base. He had no choice.
So the financiers screw up spectacularly by
engineering a gigantic crisis. They are to blame. Even George W. Bush has
described them as “irresponsible individuals.” Then they are bailed out. Meanwhile
‘little people’ are left to go hang in the recession triggered by financial
collapse and, to add insult to injury, have to stump up to cover all the damage
the wasters have caused.
Surely Paulson must have thought long and
hard about his proposal to demand $700bn from the American people with menaces?
Not really. The written ‘plan’ is just 2½ pages long! Congress has been given
till Friday 26th September to agree and, in so doing, take
responsibility for the tax hike. Take it or leave it. They have to sign a blank
cheque. It’s bail-out blackmail!
The sheer arrogance of it is breathtaking.
Naturally Congress is abuzz with talk along the lines of, ‘Didn’t we chase
George III out for behaving like this?’ But they’re all at sea. In debating the
plan there is the normal log rolling, horse trading and special pleading you
get in capitalist democracies. There is also the natural tendency for the
Democrats to tell the Republicans (correctly), ‘There’s another fine mess you
got us in to.’
And there are practical problems with the
plan. The securities to be investigated are fantastically complex. That is one
reason why they’re not secure. We now realise that the financial whizz-kids who
devised them didn’t have the foggiest idea what they were worth, if anything.
They roll up perfectly good financial assets in with the toxins. How is a man
in a suit supposed to walk into a bank and identify and sift out as dodgy a specific
mortgage in Pennsylvania listed on a piece of paper? At best this is
painstaking work that will take years.
But, we told we haven’t got years. The
financial system needs saving now – by Friday! Warren Buffet, the world’s
richest man, threw his weight behind the programme in order to avoid “an
economic Pearl Harbour.” He went on, “Last week, we were at the brink of
something that would have made anything that’s happened in financial history
pale…I’m not saying the Paulson plan will eliminate the problem but it’s
absolutely necessary, in my view, to avoid going off the precipice.”
So the pressure is on Congress. ‘You don’t
have to agree,’ they are being told by big business, ‘But, if you don’t, the
world will come to an end next Monday.’ Ordinary Americans can see that Main
Street is being hammered for the benefit of Wall Street. Flint car worker Lew
Rough, interviewed by the ‘Financial Times’ (24.09.08) declares, “We’re not
losing sleep over a few people losing their jobs on Wall Street…People who can’t
pay their mortgages are going to look at Wall Street and say, ‘If they got
bailed out, why not me?” Even John McCain has joined the refrain. “We are not
going to leave the workers here in Michigan hung out to dry while we give
billions in taxpayer dollars to Wall Street,” he says. The trouble is, Buffet
is right. If the banks are not bailed out, we could be looking at economic
Armageddon.
It gets worse. If the main thing is for the
government to be seen pumping in money – ‘as much as it takes’- then that puts
the financial institutions that hold these rotten financial assets in an
enviable position. They can pretty well charge what they like. After all, it’s
just the poor, stupid taxpayer who ends up bearing the burden. The taxpayers
will get their revenge by giving Congress a good kicking if they find they’ve
signed up to a dodgy deal. This row could run and run.
Though we see all the brinkmanship going on
as this is written, it seems likely that Congress will crumble before the
deadline. If the deal goes through, that could still put pressure on the dollar
and on bond markets, as the burdens are loaded on to the national debt. And if
Congress does refuse to sign, then financial markets could get really
interesting next week.
Inevitably the crisis and the ultimatum impact on the Presidential
campaign. $700bn spent bailing out the bankers is $700bn that can’t be spent
elsewhere – on reforms or for the poor. Barack Obama has ambitious and expensive plans aimed at health care, education, infrastructure, alternative
energy and other concerns. Those plans are completely up in the air if the
bail-out goes through. Obama’s a realist, that is to say he is a capitalist
politician. "Does that mean I can do everything that I’ve called for
in this campaign right away? Probably not," he said. He hasn’t said what
proposals might be delayed first.
So, if you want
to know who has won the Presidential elections, the bankers have won. The banks
are too big to fail. That’s before a single person has voted. Whatever the
final outcome, this incident is going to leave a very sour taste in people’s
mouths. Basically, ordinary American working people have been swindled. They
have been shown in the starkest way that the country is run by the rich for the
rich. And a lot of them may conclude that it’s time that changed. The banks should
not be bailed out for the benefit of the rich but should be taken over as part
of the socialist transformation of society.