Who is Henry Paulson?
By Tom Eley
23 September 2008

The plan to rescue the US financial industry arrogates virtually
unlimited money and power over the financial affairs of the state to
the office of Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson. Paulson is a figure
with a long history of intimate connections to the political and
financial elite.

In 1970, fresh from the Masters program of the Harvard Business
School, Paulson entered the Nixon administration, working first as
staff assistant to the assistant secretary of defense. In 1972-73,
Paulson worked as office assistant to John Erlichman, assistant to the
president for domestic affairs. Erlichman was one of the key figures
involved in organizing President Richard Nixon’s notorious “plumbers”
unit that carried out illegal covert operations against the
president’s political opponents, including espionage, blackmail, and
revenge. Ehlichman resigned in 1973, and in 1975 he was convicted of
obstruction of justice, perjury, and conspiracy, and was imprisoned
for 18 months.

Utilizing his connections, Paulson went to work for Goldman Sachs in
1974. In a 2007 feature, the British newspaper the Guardian wrote,
“Not only was he well connected enough to get the job [in the Nixon
White House], but well connected enough to resign in the thick of the
Watergate scandal without ever getting caught up in the fallout. He
went straight to Goldman back home in Illinois.”

Paulson rose through the ranks of Goldman Sachs, becoming a partner in
1982, co-head of investment banking in 1990, chief operating officer
in 1994. In 1998 he forced out his co-chairman Jon Corzine “in what
amounted to a coup,” according to New York Times economics
correspondent Floyd Norris, and took over the post of CEO.

Goldman Sachs is perhaps the single best-connected Wall Street firm.
Its executives routinely go in and out of top government posts.
Corzine went on to become US senator from New Jersey and is now the
state’s governor. Corzine’s predecessor, Stephen Friedman, served in
the Bush administration as assistant to the president for economic
policy and as chairman of the National Economic Council (NEC).
Friedman’s predecessor as Goldman Sachs CEO, Robert Rubin, served as
chairman of the NEC and later treasury secretary under Bill Clinton.

Agence France Press, in a 2006 article on Paulson’s appointment, “Has
Goldman Sachs Taken Over the Bush Administration?” noted that, in
addition to Paulson, “[t]he president’s chief of staff, Josh Bolten,
and the chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Jeffery
Reuben, are Goldman alumni.”

“But the flow goes both ways,” the article continued, “Goldman
recently hired Robert Zoellick, who stepped down as the US deputy
secretary of state, and Faryar Shirzad, who worked as one of Bush’s
national security advisors.”

Prior to being selected as treasury secretary, Paulson was a major
individual campaign contributor to Republican candidates, giving over
$336,000 of his own money between 1998 and 2006.

Since taking office, Paulson has overseen the destruction of three of
Goldman Sachs’ rivals. In March, Paulson helped arrange the fire sale
of Bear Stearns to JPMorgan Chase. Then, a little more than a week
ago, he allowed Lehman Brothers to collapse, while simultaneously
organizing the absorption of Merrill Lynch by Bank of America. This
left only Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley as major investment banks,
both of which were converted on Sunday into bank holding companies, a
move that effectively ended the existence of the investment bank as a
distinct economic form.

In the months leading up to his proposed $700 billion bailout of the
financial industry, Paulson had already used his office to dole out
hundreds of billions of dollars. After his July 2008 proposal for $70
billion to resolve the insolvency of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
failed, Paulson organized the government takeover of the two mortgage-
lending giants for an immediate $200 billion price tag, while making
the government potentially liable for hundreds of billions more in bad
debt. He then organized a federal purchase of an 80 percent stake in
the giant insurer American International Group (AIG) at a cost of $85
billion.

These bailouts have been designed to prevent a chain reaction collapse
of the world economy, but more importantly they aimed to insulate and
even reward the wealthy shareholders, like Paulson, primarily
responsible for the financial collapse.

Paulson bears a considerable amount of personal responsibility for the
crisis.

Paulson, according to a celebratory 2006 BusinessWeek article entitled
“Mr. Risk Goes to Washington,” was “one of the key architects of a
more daring Wall Street, where securities firms are taking greater and
greater chances in their pursuit of profits.” Under Paulson’s watch,
that meant “taking on more debt: $100 billion in long-term debt in
2005, compared with about $20 billion in 1999. It means placing big
bets on all sorts of exotic derivatives and other securities.”

According to the International Herald Tribune, Paulson “was one of the
first Wall Street leaders to recognize how drastically investment
banks could enhance their profitability by betting with their own
capital instead of acting as mere intermediaries.” Paulson “stubbornly
assert[ed] Goldman’s right to invest in, advise on and finance deals,
regardless of potential conflicts.”

Paulson then handsomely benefited from the speculative boom. This
wealth was based on financial manipulation and did nothing to create
real value in the economy. On the contrary, the extraordinary
enrichment of individuals like Paulson was the corollary to the
dismantling of the real economy, the bankrupting of the government,
and the impoverishment of masses the world over.

Paulson was compensated to the tune of $30 million in 2004 and took
home $37 million in 2005. In his career at Goldman Sachs he built up a
personal net worth of over $700 million, according to estimates.

After Paulson’s ascension to the treasury, his colleagues at Goldman
Sachs carried on the bonanza. At the end of 2006, Paulson’s successor
Lloyd Blankfein was handed over a $53.4 million year-end bonus, while
11 other Goldman Sachs executives raked in $150 million in year-end
bonuses combined. That year, the top investment firms Goldman Sacks,
Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch, Lehman Brothers, and Bear Stearns
handed out $36 billion in bonuses. At the end of 2007, the executives
of the same firms, excepting Merrill, were handed another $30 billion.


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