‘Modern history’s greatest regulatory failure’; ‘The end of American
capitalism as we know it’; these are just two of the headlines thrown up by the
credit crunch, both appearing in the Financial
Times, the organ of British finance capital. In the course of a single
week, we have seen the collapse of three of America’s biggest financial
institutions: on Sunday 13th September, Bank of America announced it
was buying out Merrill Lynch, one of the world’s most famous investment banks; on
the following Monday, Lehman Brothers, the fourth largest securities firm in
the US, filed for bankruptcy; and, as if that were not enough, on Tuesday, the
US Federal Reserve invested $85 billion in a takeover of AIG, America’s largest
insurance company. More recently, on Thursday 25th, the huge US bank
Washington Mutual, in a state of collapse, was taken over by JP Morgan Chase,
in a move described as ‘the biggest bank failure in American history” (Saskia Scholtes, Joanna Chung and Deborah
Brewster, JPMorgan swoops in again, FT, September 26 2008).