The Destructive Rise of Big Finance by Kevin Phillips

by nvrgnbk 13 Replies latest jw friends

  • nvrgnbk
    nvrgnbk

    Kevin Phillips is the author of

  • American Theocracy: The Peril and Politics of Radical Religion, Oil, and Borrowed Money in the 21st Century (2006) ISBN 0-670-03486-X
  • American Dynasty: Aristocracy, Fortune, and the Politics of Deceit in the House of Bush (2004) ISBN 0-670-03264-6
  • April 1, 2008

    Kevin Phillips

    Kevin Phillips

    The Destructive Rise of Big Finance

    http://www.stumbleupon.com/submit.php?url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kevin-phillips/the-destructive-rise-of-b_b_94351.html&title=Kevin Phillips: The Destructive Rise of Big Finance http://digg.com/submit?phase=2&url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kevin-phillips/the-destructive-rise-of-b_b_94351.html&title=Kevin Phillips: The Destructive Rise of Big Finance http://reddit.com/submit?url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kevin-phillips/the-destructive-rise-of-b_b_94351.html&title=Kevin Phillips: The Destructive Rise of Big Finance http://del.icio.us/post?v=4&noui&jump=close&url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kevin-phillips/the-destructive-rise-of-b_b_94351.html&title=Kevin Phillips: The Destructive Rise of Big Finance http://buzz.yahoo.com/article/huffington_post/http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kevin-phillips/the-destructive-rise-of-b_b_94351.html

    Economic, financial and regulatory issues should dominate politics and government in the United States for the next two or three years, which is important enough. National discourse may also have a new and deserving bogeyman. Franklin D. Roosevelt had Big Business, Ronald Reagan had Big Labor, and my guess is that the new president inaugurated next January will have Big Finance.

    True, finance has been whupped by presidents before. Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson, for example. But that was in the quill-pen era when the financial sector was a pup. Today's financial services sector, by contrast, is a grasping, gargantuan combination of banks, stockbrokers, insurancemen, loan sharks, credit-card issuers, hedge fund speculators, securitization mavens and mortgage operators. Over the last five years, financial services has reached a swollen 20-21% of U.S. GDP -- the largest sector of the private economy.

    Manufacturing led financial services by 2:1 back in the 1970s, but by 2006 beaten goods production had shrunk to just 12% of GDP.

    Do most Americans understand this? Of course not. Newspaper front pages have shunned any discussion; 60 Minutes has not even spared the transformation sixty seconds, despite its vast implications. This upheaval is probably "the greatest story never told" about the two decades between, say, 1986 and 2006.

    Nor was it an economic accident. Computerization was a prequisite, as was the rise of financial mathematics. However, I would say that the two most important underpinnings of financialization lay in the rise of public and private debt as a mainstay of American culture and economics and the perpetual liquidity and bail-out support of the Federal Reserve Board under Alan Greenspan. During Greenspan's 1987-2005 tenure, the sum of public and private debt in the United States quadrupled from just over $10 trillion to $43 trillion. Finance became the industry that was not allowed to fail but was permitted to enlarge and metastasize its behavior almost at will. Regulation was minimal. Favoritism was omnipresent.

    The result, alas, has been all over recent headlines. America's biggest ever housing bubble, with 57 varieties of exotic mortgages and home prices now plummeting at rates unseen since the 1930s. The United States turned Credit Card Nation, with a citzenry in thrall to plastic, 20% interest rates and late fees for just about everything. Huge banks like Citigroup feel no shame in paying billion-dollar fines for colluding with Enron's tax and accounting deceits. And since mid-2007, national and world credit markets have been panicked and paralyzed by hitherto obscure instruments -- the stand-outs are collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) -- that not even their designers and packagers can explain.

    Adolescent versions of Frankenstein finance became a crash and a disaster for Americans in 1929 when the industry was new and represented only 10-15% of the economic weight of American manufacturing. Now, by contrast, the unraveling of a second financial sector-turned casino involves literally the biggest force in the American economy. Who knows how much of this hubris and malfeasance is going to unwind unpleasantly or how long that will take?

    In fact, phony Washington statistics and warped market measurements make it doubly hard to tell. The federal Consumer Price Index is already regarded by many Americans as a con job, and the press periodically quotes investors who state their belief that current U.S. inflation is really 6 to 9 percent a year, not the 2-4 percent the government alleges. I agree. On top of which, because the value of the dollar has dropped so far, the Dow Jones Industrial Average at the end of March was not really 12,200, a number barely up from its 11,700 peak in 2000. If you measure the Dow in Swiss francs or euros, two strong currencies, it has already lost some forty percent of its 2000 value. Too many Americans live in a dream-world of economic misinformation.

    I began writing about these matters with a 1990 book entitled The Politics of Rich and Poor, and in several other volumes since then. Today, the economic negligence of Washington and Wall Street, more than two decades in the making, has led to a multi-dimensional crisis in which this country faces an unprecedented convergence of problems: unprecedented debt, tumbling home prices, reckless money supply expansion, growing inflation, insufficient and expensive oil, and an eroding dollar. Sadly, there may no longer be a plausible way out.

    Kevin Phillips' new book, Bad Money: Reckless Finance, Failed Politics and the Global Crisis of American Capitalism, is being published in April by Viking.

  • jstalin
    jstalin
    reckless money supply expansion, growing inflation, insufficient and expensive oil, and an eroding dollar.

    Absolutely correct. However, the root of the problem is not probed. The Federal Reserve, which creates money out of thin air, is the basis for inflation (which is a form of money supply expansion), which then devalues the dollar and sends commodity prices up. If you adjust oil for the drop in the value of the dollar, prices would be about 30% lower for Americans.

    A little primer on inflation: http://www.mises.org/story/1947

  • nvrgnbk
    nvrgnbk
    If you adjust oil for the drop in the value of the dollar, prices would be about 30% lower for Americans.

    Great point, one often overlooked by conspiracy theorists.

  • BurnTheShips
    BurnTheShips

    jstalin is right.

    These are mostly problems created by too much government intervention and a fiat currency. The government is also in cahoots with the big financiers.

    http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-7972234283383965107

    We are enslaved by a "false set of balances".

    alt

  • new boy
    new boy

    And why haven't we heard more about it?

    The Media is owned by guess who...you guessed it

  • Octarine Prince
    Octarine Prince

    Wealthy people?

    Got it!!!

  • JK666
    JK666

    nvr,

    Another interesting cut and paste.

    JK

  • jstalin
    jstalin

    And why haven't we heard more about it?

    The Media is owned by guess who...you guessed it

    Media is mostly an entertainment machine, pure and simple. Federal Reserve monetary policy doesn't make for simple, dumb dumb 10 second soundbites.

  • nvrgnbk
    nvrgnbk

    nvr,

    Another interesting cut and paste.

    JK

    Thanks, John.

    I'm glad you enjoyed it.

  • Quirky1
    Quirky1

    I like the tune of this thread. I was trying to explain this very subject to my wife this morning on our commute to work. I would like to here more commentary on the subject if anyone has any more info.

    Thank you,

    Quirky1

  • Share this

    Google+
    Pinterest
    Reddit