Just as the
Bush regime�s wars have been used to pour billions of dollars into the pockets
of its military-security donor base, the Paulson bailout looks like a
Bush regime scheme to incur $700 billion in new public debt in order to
transfer the money into the coffers of its financial donor base. The US taxpayers will be left with
the interest payments in perpetuity (or inflation if the Fed monetizes the
debt), and the number of Wall Street billionaires will grow. As for the US and
European governments� purchases of bank shares, that is just a cover for
funneling public money into private hands.
The
explanations that have been given for the crisis and its bailout are opaque. The
US Treasury estimates that as few as 7 percent of the mortgages are bad. Why
then do the US, UK, Germany, and France need to pour more than $2.1 trillion of
public money into private financial institutions?
If, as the
government tells us, the crisis stems from subprime mortgage defaults reducing the interest payments to
the holders of mortgage backed securities, thus driving down their values and
threatening the solvency of the institutions that hold them, why isn�t the
bailout money used to address the problem at its source? If the bailout money
was used to refinance troubled mortgages and to pay off foreclosed mortgages,
the mortgage backed securities would be made whole, and it would be unnecessary
to pour huge sums of public money into banks. Instead, the bailout money is
being used to inject capital into financial institutions and to purchase from
them troubled financial instruments.
It is a
strange solution that does not address the problem. As the US economy sinks
deeper into recession, the mortgage defaults will rise. Thus, the problem will
intensify, necessitating the purchase of yet more troubled instruments.
If credit card debt has also been securitized and sold as investments, as the economy
worsens defaults on credit card debt will be a replay of the mortgage
defaults. How much debt can the Treasury bail out before its own credit
rating sinks?
The
contribution of credit default swaps to the financial crisis has not been made
clear. These swaps are bets that a designated financial instrument will fail.
In exchange for �premium� payments,
the seller of a swap protects the buyer of the swap from default by, for
example, a company�s bond that the swap buyer might not even own. If these
swaps are also securitized and sold as investments, more nebulous assets appear
on balance sheets.
Normally,
if you and I make a bet, and I welsh on the bet, it doesn�t threaten your
solvency. If we place bets with a bookie and the odds go against the bookie,
the bookie will fail, as apparently happened to AIG, necessitating an $85
billion bailout of the insurance company, and to Bear Stearns resulting in the
demise of the investment bank.
Credit
default swaps are a form of unregulated insurance. One danger of the swaps is
that they allow speculators to purchase protection against a company defaulting
on its bonds, without the speculators having to own the company�s bonds.
Speculators can then short the company�s stock, driving down its price and
raising questions about the viability of the company�s bonds. This raises the
value of the speculators� swaps which can be sold to holders of the company�s
bonds. By ruining a company�s prospects, the speculators make money.
Another
danger is that swaps encourage investors to purchase riskier, higher-yielding
instruments in the belief that the instruments are insured, but the sellers of
swaps have not reserved against them.
Double-counting
of assets is also possible if a bank purchases a company�s bonds, for example,
then purchases credit default swaps on the bonds, and lists both as assets on
its balance sheet.
The $85
billion Treasury bailout of AIG is small compared to the $700 billion for the banks,
and the emphasis has been on banks, not insurance companies. According to news
reports, the sums associated with credit default swaps are far larger than the
subprime mortgage derivatives. Have the swaps yet to become major players in
the crisis?
The
behavior of the stock market does not necessarily tell us anything about the
bailout. The financial crisis disrupted lending and thus comprised a threat to
non-financial firms. This threat would reflect in the stock market. However,
the stock market is also predicting a recession and declining earnings. Thus,
people sell stocks hoping to get out before share prices adjust to the new
lower earnings.
The bailout
package is a result of panic and threats, not of analysis and understanding. Neither
Congress nor the public knows the full story. If the problem is the mortgages,
why does the bailout leave the mortgages unaddressed and focus instead on
pouring vast amount of public money into private financial institutions?
The purpose
of regulation is to restrain greed and to prevent leveraged speculation from
threatening the wider society. Congress needs to restore financial regulation,
not reward those who caused the crisis.
Paul
Craig Roberts [email
him] was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury during President
Reagan�s first term. He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal. He has
held numerous academic appointments, including the William E. Simon Chair,
Center for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University,
and Senior Research Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He was
awarded the Legion of Honor by French President Francois Mitterrand. He is the
author of Supply-Side
Revolution : An Insider�s Account of Policymaking in Washington; Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and Meltdown:
Inside the Soviet Economy, and is the co-author with Lawrence M.
Stratton of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and Bureaucrats Are Trampling the
Constitution in the Name of Justice. Click here for
Peter Brimelow�s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the recent
epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.