Wall Street demands free hand with funding from US Treasury
By Patrick Martin
13 October 2008

US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson signaled a significant shift in
the plan to turn over hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars to Wall
Street, announcing Friday that the Bush administration will invest
funds directly in financial institutions, rather than buying mortgage-
backed securities.

The change is driven in part by the rapid deterioration of global
financial markets, which makes the bailout as initially proposed by
Paulson—a complicated process in which banks will offer their toxic
securities for purchase by the Treasury in reverse auctions—far too
slow to funnel vast amounts of cash into the financial system.
There was a widespread clamor in the financial press insisting that
the bailout proposed by British Prime Minister Gordon Brown was more
effective and faster than the Paulson plan. Brown said that his plan
to inject capital directly into major British banks would start
delivering hundreds of billions in public funds as early as Monday.
In an additional effort to speed up the bailout, Paulson directed
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-chartered mortgage giants
that were taken over by federal authorities last month, to begin
immediate purchases of mortgage-backed securities using the $100
billion apiece appropriated by Congress in July—a sum on top of the
$700 billion authorized in the bank bailout legislation passed by
Congress October 3.

There was also concern that the overall size of the bailout was now
inadequate for the scale of the catastrophe, following the worst week
on global stock markets in history. According to a report in the New
York Times Sunday, “Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. has
refused to say whether the capital infusion program for banks would be
bigger than the original plan to buy troubled assets.”

The Times noted opinion on Wall Street that Paulson’s initial proposal
has simply been overtaken by events. “Even if it was adequate before,
it’s not adequate now,” former Federal Reserve governor Frederic
Mishkin told the newspaper.

According to the Times account of internal Bush administration and
Federal Reserve discussions, the Treasury initially opposed
suggestions by Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke that capital should be
injected directly into the banks “in part because they were
ideologically opposed to direct government involvement in business.”

During the past ten days, however, important financial institutions,
including Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, demanded action urgently.
Both Paulson and the Treasury official he selected as the interim
administrator of the bailout, Neel Kashkari, are veterans of Goldman
Sachs.

When Paulson indicated that he was now in favor of the Treasury buying
either common or preferred shares of stock, the Times reported,
“Industry executives quickly told Mr. Paulson that they liked the
idea, though they warned that the Treasury should not try to squeeze
out existing shareholders. They also begged Mr. Paulson not to impose
tough restrictions on executive pay and golden-parachute deals for
executives who are fired. Mr. Paulson heeded those pleas.”

The picture presented here is remarkable: US government officials are
engaged in high-level consultations with top bankers and with
officials of other G-7 countries, as well as China, in an effort to
halt the chain-reaction collapse of the world financial system.
Despite lip service to the impact that a financial market meltdown
will have on “Main Street,” the real concern in these talks is how to
safeguard the wealth of the CEOs and other top executives whose
speculative financial manipulations have produced the market disaster.

Paulson, the former CEO of Goldman Sachs—himself a near-billionaire
when he joined the Bush administration in 2006—is fully in sympathy
with the demands of his former peers. In his statement Friday, he
assured banks that the government would acquire only “nonvoting”
shares. In other words, Wall Street is to be given virtually unlimited
access to federal cash without any restrictions on how the money is
used, including how big a share will go directly into the pockets of
those responsible for the crisis in the first place.

The entire world economy, and the livelihoods of billions of people,
are thus being held hostage to the demands of a handful of Wall Street
bankers and speculators to guarantee their gargantuan personal incomes
and assets. There is not the slightest suggestion in the official
“debate” over economic policy that those responsible for the financial
collapse should be made to pay for it.

The revised Paulson plan is an even more brazen effort to bail out the
richest people in America at the expense of the people. That is why it
is being hailed by the pillars of the capitalist press in the United
States. The Wall Street Journal, in an editorial October 9, endorsed
the decision by Gordon Brown to inject capital into British banks as
well as Paulson’s hints that he might do something similar.

“We take—and hope—that this means Mr. Paulson is willing to use some
of his new $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program (Tarp) to inject
capital into individual banks if needed to prevent failures,” the
Journal wrote.
The Washington Post, in an editorial October 11, praised Paulson’s
decision to follow the British example,
declaring: “This would involve a direct infusion of funds into banks
through the purchase of equity stakes. In contrast to the earlier plan
to use most of the $700 billion to buy ‘toxic’ mortgage securities,
the new strategy could more directly address the problem of the banks’
solvency, and it might have a quicker effect.”

The Times itself echoed this view the same day, editorializing that a
new global approach to the crisis should include “some temporary
government guarantee for deposits and loans to unlock interbank
lending and gain some time to figure out which banks can be saved and
which cannot. It should provide for governments to quickly inject
equity capital into banks.”

Bringing up the rear were the congressional Democrats and Democratic
presidential candidate Barack Obama, who will embrace whatever
measures are proposed by the Bush administration and backed by Wall
Street. Senator Charles Schumer (Democrat of New York), the chairman
of the Joint Economic Committee, said Paulson’s proposal to inject
federal money into selected banks “is gaining steam.” He added, “I am
hopeful that tomorrow the Treasury will announce that they’re doing
it. And they have to do it quickly... markets are waiting.”

This process of capital injection is frequently described by the media
as “partial nationalization” of the American banking system, as though
it represented some sort of inroad into private property. On the
contrary, it would be better described as the “partial privatization”
or, more properly, the outright looting of the US Treasury by Wall
Street executives and big investors who are now demanding that the
American people pay off their bad debts.

Any such arrangement would be the opposite of genuine, i.e.,
socialist, nationalization, in which the financial system would be
taken under public ownership and reorganized to serve the needs of the
working class—the vast majority of the population—rather than the
financial aristocracy.


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