Phillips Slams Wall Street, Feckless Politicians in `Bad Money'

Review by James Pressley


 April 21 (Bloomberg) -- To hear Kevin Phillips tell it, the U.S. is a
world power on the skids, an overstretched empire slumping toward the
fate of Hapsburg Spain, the maritime Dutch Republic and imperial Britain.

The culprits: Wall Street and Washington.

The former Republican strategist lays out his harsh case in ``Bad
Money,'' an update of his 2006 bestseller, ``American Theocracy,'' which
warned that the U.S. was dangerously dependent on debt and oil. Events
have so far vindicated his views.

Thematically, ``Bad Money'' resembles a map of a city subway. It's
schematically clear yet complex, with whorls of intersecting lines in
red, yellow and blue. The circuit covers ``reckless finance, failed
politics and the global crisis of American capitalism,'' as the subtitle
puts it. Stops along the way include primers on securitization, peak
oil, government manipulation of inflation data, and the drooping dollar.

What sets ``Bad Money'' apart from a stack of recent books on these
topics is its emphasis on the symbiotic relationship between politicians
and big money. Solving the debt and oil mess will be tough enough. It
will be made harder by the millions of dollars flowing from bankers and
hedge fund operators into the campaigns of Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama
and John McCain.

``Far more worrisome is the possibility that neither Washington nor Wall
Street is willing to confront the deeper problem -- the ascendancy of
finance in national policymaking (as well as in the gross domestic
product), and the complicity of politicians who really don't want to
talk about it,'' he says.

Fatal Error

In Phillips's view, U.S. politicians have made the fatal error of
betting the nation's future on finance. In 1950, manufacturing
represented 29.3 percent of U.S. GDP, while financial services accounted
for 10.9 percent, he shows. By 2005, the roles had reversed, with
financial services accounting for 20.4 percent and manufacturing for 12
percent.

Like the Spanish, Dutch and British hegemonies before it, the U.S. has
let itself *``luxuriate in finance at the expense of harvesting,
manufacturing, or transporting things,''* he writes. ``Doing so has
marked each nation's global decline.''

Phillips says his book is only tangentially about the current election.
Yet he happily shows how the money moves from investment firms to
Clinton, Obama and -- more vaguely -- McCain.

The Democratic and Republican parties have ossified into a duopoly
dominated by dynasties and disconnected from voters, Phillips says.
Sounding increasingly cranky, he curses both their houses, saying
``political ineptitude and misjudgment have been bipartisan phenomena.''

`Financial Mercantilism'

The book repeats ideas that Phillips has written about before. He again
uses the term ``financial mercantilism'' to describe how Washington and
Wall Street have collaborated ``to minimize certain unwanted marketplace
forces.''

Hence the long, sad history -- from the Latin American debt crisis and
the S&L bailout to the subprime mortgage meltdown -- of the U.S.
government and Federal Reserve rescuing our failed financial wizards. He
gives a name for what happens when taxpayers rescue profligate bankers:
``Wall Street socialism.''

Like a prosecutor, Phillips speaks with a finely honed indignation and
calls expert witnesses to challenge the ``myth'' that financial markets
are ``a rational and safe underpinning for public well-being and the
stewardship of a leading world economic power.''

``Over the years, a handful of critical academicians and several
billionaire investors -- Warren Buffett, George Soros, and William H.
(Bill) Gross -- would emerge as relentless critics of derivatives,
bubbles and alleged market efficiency,'' he says.

`Permanently Blighted'

Phillips avoids making firm predictions, though he closes with a warning
that some U.S. cities, post-bubble, may end up ``permanently blighted,
with large new boarded-up areas.'' New York, he adds, may lose ground to
London as a financial center.

What can be done? Phillips is frustratingly short on solutions, though
he suggests that the U.S. could -- like Germany, Japan and Switzerland
-- focus on high-value-added manufacturing. He also offers this
``hopeful context'':

``Spain, Holland and Britain are far more prosperous today than they
were at the heights of their global reach,'' he said.

``Bad Money'' is from Viking (239 pages, $25.95).

(James Pressley writes for Bloomberg News. The opinions expressed are
his own.)

To contact the writer of this review: James Pressley in Brussels at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Last Updated: April 20, 2008 20:11 EDT



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