Published 2012.01.30 in CommPRO.biz
Too Big To Loan?
Earlier this month (2013.01.16) the president of the Dallas
Federal Reserve Bank, Richard Fisher, delivered a speech worthy of a Texas straight shooter.
It was followed up the next day by a 30+ page report supporting the need to
deal with the danger a handful –about a dozen- Too Big To Fail (TBTF) banks
present to our economy.
These are the same financial monsters whose reckless actions
pulled the rug out from under the world economy and brought about the 2008
crash. The folks who put millions of people out of their homes, crippled small
businesses and drove the unemployment numbers in America sky high. The same handful
of reckless banksters, who rolled the dice, lost and left the rest of us with
no alternative but to bail them out.
In an effort to avoid a repeat of this disaster the Congress
passed the Dodd-Frank Act. In the end the TBTF banks’ lobbying efforts allowed
them to stay focused on risky speculative (AKA gambling) deals, knowing full
well that contrary to its intent, Dodd-Frank does nothing to protect against
another taxpayer bailout. Mr. Fisher concedes there’s little chance that we can
rein-in their reckless behavior in the short term. He does, however, offer an
escape hatch to take the taxpayers off the hook to some degree.
If he had his druthers, Mr. Fisher would slice the monster
banks into separate entities, none large enough to destabilize our economy. He
would peel away all of their financial activities that fall outside the banks’ traditional
role. While that remains the long-range goal laid out in the Dallas Fed’s
report, their short-term goal seems to correct much of the problem.
Mr. Fisher points out that the insurance protection created
in 1933 –The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)– was intended to
cover our hometown and regional banks. The 98.8% we ordinary folk are used to
dealing with, not the 12 monster banks, the 0.2% who hog nearly 70% of all
banking assets. Assets we furnish them with to make small business loans and
create jobs. But that’s not what the use it for. Instead they use the free
money we furnish to make wild bets, secure in the knowledge that if they lose,
we pay.
Restricting FDIC protection to its intended role would roadblock
moves like the one Bank of America made the first of this month (January 2013).
They moved derivative contracts worth $15 trillion from their broker-dealer
division to their insured depository institution. Guess who’s on the hook if
those puppies go bad?
It’s past time that the low interest cash we provide the
banks goes to the 98.8%, the regional and Community Banks who will provide
small business loans. If the monster banks -the 0.2%- want to gamble, let them
do it with their investors’ cash. And make sure those investors know that their
funds will not insured by America’s
taxpayers.
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