Mr. Trust Buster

ERIC M. JOHNSON 

If you’re masochis­tic – or have a lot of Adder­all – econ­o­mist John May­nard Keynes’ 75-year-old opus, The Gen­er­al The­o­ry of Employ­ment, Inter­est, and Mon­ey, is full of gems that shine light on the mod­ern pick­le over reg­u­la­to­ry reform and ide­o­log­i­cal direction.

To wit: ​“The dif­fi­cul­ty lies not in the new ideas, but in escap­ing from the old ones,” Keynes wrote. That is an apt sum­ma­ry of the mes­sage that Nobel-lau­re­ate and New Key­ne­sian econ­o­mist Joseph Stiglitz is preach­ing as he tours the coun­try with his new book, Free Fall: Amer­i­ca, Free Mar­kets, and The Sink­ing of the World Econ­o­my (W. W. Nor­ton, January).

The Oba­ma stim­u­lus bill, he argues, was nei­ther big enough nor enact­ed fast enough.

On Feb­ru­ary 18, the day after the first anniver­sary of the stim­u­lus bill, Stiglitz brought his book and ide­ol­o­gy to ene­my ter­ri­to­ry, the Uni­ver­si­ty of Chica­go. The ​“Chica­go School” is ruled by the deceased demigod Mil­ton Fried­man, who preached the mon­e­tarist and effi­cient mar­ket dis­course at the uni­ver­si­ty. His ideas stand in direct oppo­si­tion to Stiglitz, who has emerged as one of the left’s most promi­nent cham­pi­ons of finan­cial reg­u­la­to­ry reform.

Free Fall was writ­ten dur­ing ​“the mid­dle of the bat­tle,” Stiglitz told In These Times. While the full con­se­quences of the cri­sis are not yet known, he says, ​“Almost sure­ly, the fail­ures of the Oba­ma and Bush admin­is­tra­tions will rank among the most cost­ly mis­takes of any mod­ern demo­c­ra­t­ic gov­ern­ment at any time.”

Stiglitz and his fol­low­ers want, among oth­er things, rig­or­ous reg­u­la­tion, includ­ing the sep­a­ra­tion of invest­ment bank­ing, com­mer­cial bank­ing, and hedge funds, and anoth­er round of ecoom­ic stim­u­lus. To Stiglitz, size does mat­ter, and it’s a prob­lem: the mar­ket share of the five largest U.S. banks grew from 8 per­cent in 1995 to 30 per­cent today.

“The con­cern I have,” Stiglitz says, ​“is that even now, in Con­gress, the Repub­li­cans are say­ing that they don’t want to take actions to deal with sys­temic risk” – that is, the risk that the entire eco­nom­ic sys­tem will fail. 

“I didn’t expect uni­ver­sal sup­port for the per­spec­tive that I push for,” says Stiglitz, ​“but at least very strong sup­port. I have been a lit­tle bit amazed at, for instance, with­in the eco­nom­ics pro­fes­sion, the num­ber of econ­o­mists that seem to still believe the effi­cient mar­ket hypoth­e­sis. There are even those who say, ​‘What are peo­ple upset about with unem­ploy­ment? That is just an oppor­tu­ni­ty to enjoy more leisure.’ “

Stiglitz attrib­ut­es that quote to the Ari­zona State Uni­ver­si­ty econ­o­mist Edward Prescott, win­ner of the Nobel Prize for eco­nom­ics in 2004. In his defense, Prescott says he was refer­ring to eco­nom­ic def­i­n­i­tions, not mak­ing light of the U.S. ​“depres­sion.” (He also says: ​“Joe’s an asshole.”)

There was a moment at the height of the cur­rent finan­cial cri­sis, Stiglitz says, when every­one was a Key­ne­sian, but that’s no longer true.

“Let’s get this notion out of our heads that the gov­ern­ment cre­ates jobs,” Repub­li­can Nation­al Com­mit­tee Chair­man Michael Steele told CNN in Feb­ru­ary 2009. ​“Not in the his­to­ry of mankind has the gov­ern­ment ever cre­at­ed a job.”

In Europe, says Stiglitz, ​“the ortho­doxy bat­tle is still going on.” The poli­cies that the Euro­pean Union is demand­ing in Greece are mas­sive fis­cal contractions.This is sim­i­lar, he says, to what hap­pened dur­ing the Asian finan­cial cri­sis of 1997, when the Inter­na­tion­al Mon­e­tary Fund demand­ed that ail­ing coun­tries like Thai­land fol­low sim­i­lar poli­cies – poli­cies that were doomed to fail, as Her­bert Hoover’s poli­cies did dur­ing the Great Depres­sion and Bush and Obama’s poli­cies are now.

Stiglitz laments these and oth­er events in the news: the ​“inchoate anger” of Tea Partiers and the $3.7 bil­lion in loss­es incurred by the Fed­er­al Reserve from the Bear Stearns bailout. ​“Of course, as a cit­i­zen I feel very upset about what is going on – the rev­e­la­tion, day by day, of the bil­lions of dol­lars the tax­pay­ers have lost in the bailout deals,” he says. And how that mon­ey won’t be repaid with interest.

He does, how­ev­er, iden­ti­fy what he termed ​“very big steps in the right direc­tion,” like the Vol­ck­er Rule that would restrict banks from mak­ing spec­u­la­tive invest­ments that do not ben­e­fit their cus­tomers; the pro­posed tax on the too-big-to-fail banks that are high­ly lever­aged; and the appoint­ment in 2008 of Har­vard law pro­fes­sor Eliz­a­beth War­ren as head of the Con­gres­sion­al Over­sight Panel.

“But,” he says, those steps ​“are about one third of what needs to be done.”

The fight continues

More may be done soon. On March 15, Con­necti­cut Demo­c­rat Christo­pher J. Dodd, chair­man of the Senate’s bank­ing com­mit­tee, unveiled a reg­u­la­to­ry over­haul pro­pos­al. He hopes to get it through his com­mit­tee before the East­er recess begin­ning March 27.

The pro­pos­al aban­dons the stand-alone Con­sumer Finan­cial Pro­tec­tion Agency ini­tial­ly pro­posed by House and Sen­ate Democ­rats in Feb­ru­ary, as well as over­hauls leg­is­la­tion passed by the House four months ago. But it would still enact the most rig­or­ous over­haul of reg­u­la­tions since the Great Depression.

Dodd’s pro­pos­al aims to cre­ate a spe­cial coun­cil that would watch for sys­temic threats to the econ­o­my. It would have an inde­pen­dent chair­man appoint­ed by the pres­i­dent and its mem­bers would include the Trea­sury Sec­re­tary, the Chair­man of the Fed­er­al Reserve and the heads of sev­er­al reg­u­la­to­ry agen­cies. The pro­pos­al would also cre­ate a con­sumer agency with­in the Fed­er­al Reserve that would have the pow­er to write reg­u­la­tions gov­ern­ing a range of con­sumer finan­cial trans­ac­tions, from mort­gages to pay­day loans to cred­it cards. Those rules could be vetoed by a two-thirds vote of the coun­cil. The con­sumer agency would not have enforce­ment powers.

And the pro­pos­al would give fed­er­al agen­cies greater con­trol over the finan­cial mar­kets, includ­ing the pow­er to dis­man­tle ​‘too big to fail’ insti­tu­tions. The Unit­ed States ​“is still vul­ner­a­ble to anoth­er cri­sis,” Dodd said March 15. ​“It is cer­tain­ly time to act.”

All 10 Repub­li­can sen­a­tors on Dodd’s com­mit­tee want him to slow down because of the ​“sheer mag­ni­tude and com­plex­i­ty” of the finan­cial reform pack­age he pro­pos­es and its inevitably sub­stan­tial impact on the finan­cial sys­tem and over­all econ­o­my, they said to him in a let­ter. The bank­ing indus­try is also avid­ly against new con­sumer reg­u­la­tors, argu­ing that they would inevitably inter­fere with exist­ing reg­u­la­tors whose duty is to ensure the sound­ness of banks.

Apart from rig­or­ous reg­u­la­to­ry reform, Stiglitz sup­ports ​“a fair tax sys­tem” and hopes for an eco­nom­ic dream team made up of the ​“users, not the pro­duc­ers.” In oth­er words, peo­ple like Sheila C. Bair, Chair­man of the Fed­er­al Deposit Insur­ance Cor­po­ra­tion, who Stiglitz says has done a remark­able job defend­ing the pub­lic inter­est by push­ing for­ward reg­u­la­tion of incen­tive struc­tures that pre­vent exces­sive risk by mak­ing deposit pre­mi­ums higher.

Pop­u­lar pres­sure points

Where should aver­age cit­i­zens chan­nel their anger?

For starters, Stiglitz says, peo­ple should demand that Con­gress lim­it the size of banks – in oth­er words, break the big banks into small­er units.

“Because they are too-big-to-fail, they can bor­row at a low­er inter­est rate, he says. ​“And as they grow big­ger they gar­ner more of the mar­ket. We ought to tax them to lev­el the play­ing field.”

He says we should be inspired by Theodore ​“Trust Buster” Roo­sevelt, who dis­solved 44 trusts, includ­ing U.S. Steel and Stan­dard Oil, dur­ing his two terms as pres­i­dent. ​“I think [Ted­dy Roo­sevelt] would be hor­ri­fied at the cur­rent polit­i­cal influ­ence of the big banks,” Stiglitz says. ​“He would have said, ​‘This is a ques­tion not of mar­ket pow­er but polit­i­cal pow­er.’ The fact that I am hav­ing such dif­fi­cul­ty deal­ing with this is proof of that point.”

A short­er ver­sion of this arti­cle appeared in In These Times’ April 2010 issue.

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