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Over the past 30 years Wall Street captured the thinking of official Washington, persuading policymakers on both sides of the aisle not to regulate (derivatives), to deregulate (Gramm-Leach-Bliley), to not enforce existing safety and soundness regulations (VaR), and to stand idly by while millions of consumers were misled into life-ruining financial decisions (Alan Greenspan).
This was pervasive cultural capture or, to be blunter, mind control. But when the crisis broke it was not enough. Having powerful people generally on your side is not what you need when all hell breaks loose in financial markets. Official decisions will be made fast, under great pressure, and by a small group of people standing up in the Oval Office.
If you run a big troubled bank, you need a man on the inside--someone who will take your calls late at night and rely on you for on the ground knowledge. Preferably, this person should have little first-hand experience of the markets (it was hard to deceive JP Morgan and Benjamin Strong when they were deciding whom to save in 1907) and only a limited range of other contacts who could dispute your account of what is really needed.
Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, and Citigroup, we learn today, have such a person: Tim Geithner, Secretary of the Treasury.
We already knew, from the NYT, that most of Geithner’s contacts during 2007 and 2008 were with a limited subset of the financial sector--primarily the big Wall Street players who were close to the New York Fed (including on its board). And the announcement of his appointment was widely regarded as very good news for those specific firms.
But Geithner himself has always insisted that his policies are intended to help the entire financial system and thus the whole economy.
“SECRETARY TIMOTHY GEITHNER: I’ve been in public service all my life. I’ve spent all my life working in government on ways to make our financial system stronger, better economic policy for this country. That’s the only thing I’ve ever done. And I would never do anything and be part of any policy that’s designed to benefit some piece of our financial system. The only thing that we care about and the only obligation I have is try to make sure this financial system is doing a better job of meeting the needs of businesses and families across the country.” Interview on Lehrer NewsHour, May 8, 2009
Geithner’s defenders insist that his specific contacts while President of the NY Fed were a function of that position; “he was only doing his job.”
But today’s AP report, based on looking at Geithner’s phone records, from the inauguration through July, suggest something else. How can anyone build an accurate picture of conditions in the entire crisis-ridden financial sector primarily from talking to a few top bankers?
The list of phone calls is not the largest banks, because some of the biggest are hardly represented (e.g., Wells Fargo), it’s not the most troubled banks (e.g., Bank of America had little contact), and it’s not even investment banker-types who were central to the most stressed markets (Morgan Stanley was not in the inner loop). And small and medium-sized banks (and others) always bristle at the suggestion that their interests are in alignment with those of, say, Goldman Sachs.
Geithner’s phone calls were primarily to and from people he knew well already--who had cultivated a relationship with him over the years, shared nonprofit board memberships, and participated in the same social activities. These are close professional colleagues and in some cases, presumably, friends.
The Obama administration had to rescue large parts of the financial sector, given the situation they inherited. But it absolutely did not have to run the rescue in this exact fashion--bending over backwards to be nice to leading bankers and allowing their banks to become even larger. Saving top executives’ jobs under such circumstances is not best practice, it’s not what the U.S. advises to other countries, it’s not what the U.S. tells the IMF to implement when it helps clean up failed banking systems, and it’s not what the FDIC implements for failed banks under its auspices.
The idea that you could leave big U.S. bank bosses in place (or let them get stronger politically) and do meaningful regulatory reform later has always seemed illusory--and this strategy now appears to be in serious trouble. But presumably Mr. Geithner’s financial advisers told him this was the right thing to do.
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COMMENTS (6)
Thank you Dr. Johnson. I'm glad someone is willing to say what needs to be said about this administration and Washington DC in general: the big moneymen own them and control them, to the detriment of the rest of us.
I always thought Geithner was one of the worst choices (if not THE worst choice) Obama made for his cabinet. Your posts confirm my fears were well founded.
Thank you Dr. Johnson. I'm glad someone is willing to say what needs to be said about this administration and Washington DC in general: the big moneymen own them and control them, to the detriment of the rest of us.
I always thought Geithner was one of the worst choices (if not THE worst choice) Obama made for his cabinet. Your posts confirm my fears were well founded.
Excellent article.
Focusing on the "mind control", to think they all think they are doing the right thing. Or at least until some point they were... Now they aren't any more, or at least they can't defensibly be... But who knows: what are the distances the human mind is capable of going through in order to deceive itself?
Well, read Aquinas on what it was named by him as "the law of sin" (a mind captured or controlled by "the law of sin").
Grand old Thomas. In there anything at all you didn't understand?
P.S. I miss Tep and Roi. They would honour us with brilliant comments if they were still around. Are they?
A "law" which presides over the sinfull action, taken as a consequence of the sinfull k ... view full comment
Excellent article.
Focusing on the "mind control", to think they all think they are doing the right thing. Or at least until some point they were... Now they aren't any more, or at least they can't defensibly be... But who knows: what are the distances the human mind is capable of going through in order to deceive itself?
Well, read Aquinas on what it was named by him as "the law of sin" (a mind captured or controlled by "the law of sin").
Grand old Thomas. In there anything at all you didn't understand?
P.S. I miss Tep and Roi. They would honour us with brilliant comments if they were still around. Are they?
A "law" which presides over the sinfull action, taken as a consequence of the sinfull knowledge that captured the mind of someone, thus turned into a sinfull mind...
Oops. Sorry. The right order is the following:
Excellent article.
Focusing on the "mind control", to think they all think they are doing the right thing. Or at least until some point they were... Now they aren't any more, or at least they can't defensibly be... But who knows: what are the distances the human mind is capable of going through in order to deceive itself?
Well, read Aquinas on what it was named by him as "the law of sin" (a mind captured or controlled by "the law of sin").
A "law" which presides over the sinfull action, taken as a consequence of the sinfull knowledge that captured the mind of someone, thus turned into a sinfull mind...
Grand old Thomas. In there anything at all you ... view full comment
Oops. Sorry. The right order is the following:
Excellent article.
Focusing on the "mind control", to think they all think they are doing the right thing. Or at least until some point they were... Now they aren't any more, or at least they can't defensibly be... But who knows: what are the distances the human mind is capable of going through in order to deceive itself?
Well, read Aquinas on what it was named by him as "the law of sin" (a mind captured or controlled by "the law of sin").
A "law" which presides over the sinfull action, taken as a consequence of the sinfull knowledge that captured the mind of someone, thus turned into a sinfull mind...
Grand old Thomas. In there anything at all you didn't understand?
P.S. I miss Tep and Roi. They would honour us with brilliant comments if they were still around. Are they?
Good question about some long time posters Luis. I haven't seen a post from Teppy in particular in a long time. Either he quit posting or maybe even dropped his TNR subscription.
Good question about some long time posters Luis. I haven't seen a post from Teppy in particular in a long time. Either he quit posting or maybe even dropped his TNR subscription.
I am an admirer of Professor Johnson, but this post isn't up to his usually high standards. The only inference one can draw is that the Secretary was overly sympathetic with his banker friends, to the detriment of the nation (and world). I see it differently. I opposed nationalization from the outset, not because I love the bankers (indeed, I loathe B of A), but because I didn't know what we would do the day after. And if confidence collapsed in any sector, all sectors of the economy were at risk. Such domino thinking may seem silly now, but definitely not then. So save the banks he did. And now we speculate how much better it could be if only the Secretary had chosen a different path ... view full comment
I am an admirer of Professor Johnson, but this post isn't up to his usually high standards. The only inference one can draw is that the Secretary was overly sympathetic with his banker friends, to the detriment of the nation (and world). I see it differently. I opposed nationalization from the outset, not because I love the bankers (indeed, I loathe B of A), but because I didn't know what we would do the day after. And if confidence collapsed in any sector, all sectors of the economy were at risk. Such domino thinking may seem silly now, but definitely not then. So save the banks he did. And now we speculate how much better it could be if only the Secretary had chosen a different path. Better? Really? Today I was paid. With a check. And I depoited the check in my bank account. And tomorrow I will pay my bills. Thanks, Mr. Secretary.
My beef isn't that he saved any banks, but rahter that their management didn't suffer much if any. GM/Chrysler management took it on the chn and were gone, a lot of them, and conditions on the companies and shareholder/bondholders were much more harsh than any bank. GM and Chrysler didn't commit the sins that got us in this mess, banks and other finance companies that are "too big to fail' did and got off with little repercussions (AIG being the prime example). Many of the same ones that got us in the mess are still at the top. And Government Sachs now is more powerful than ever, acting as they always did but with gov't props to boot.
Dr. Johnson is dead right in his assessments.
My beef isn't that he saved any banks, but rahter that their management didn't suffer much if any. GM/Chrysler management took it on the chn and were gone, a lot of them, and conditions on the companies and shareholder/bondholders were much more harsh than any bank. GM and Chrysler didn't commit the sins that got us in this mess, banks and other finance companies that are "too big to fail' did and got off with little repercussions (AIG being the prime example). Many of the same ones that got us in the mess are still at the top. And Government Sachs now is more powerful than ever, acting as they always did but with gov't props to boot.
Dr. Johnson is dead right in his assessments.