Photo Credit: EMMANUEL RUIZ
Having been seen to twitch – ever so slightly – in the 2011 tidal wave of global protests, the vampire squid
is stirring in its evil lair. Reports of sucking noises and new
tentacles sprouting in every direction tell us that the global financial
monster is poised to steal yet more wealth and resources from the
public in the coming year. Top economic thinkers have shared their
forecasts with AlterNet, and the focus is clear: 2012 will be a year of
continued – and escalating – predation by financiers. Their influence
over political, financial, and economic activity is likely to grow –
along with potential for harm.
1. Back-door Bailout of the Eurozone
Would
you like more of your hard-earned money to flow to fatcats? Wish
granted! Attorney Walker Todd, who spent two decades in the legal
departments of the Federal Reserve Banks of New York and Cleveland,
names the back-door bailout of the eurozone banking system by our very
own Federal Reserve as the top economic story of the upcoming year – or,
at least one of the most outrageous. In a nutshell, the Fed is helping
European banks by opening up the short-term ‘emergency’ lending
pipeline, which means that U.S. taxpayers are indirectly bailing out
private European capitalists. This is being done through a bit of
financial hocus pocus called “swaps” – essentially the trading of
dollars for euros. Such a maneuver allows the Fed to prop up European
banks while claiming that it is not 'technically' directly lending. In
other words, swaps are an attempt to hide the truth from the public.
As Gerald O’Driscoll put it in the Wall Street Journal:
“This Byzantine financial arrangement could hardly be better designed
to confuse observers, and it has largely succeeded on this side of the
Atlantic, where press coverage has been light.” O'Driscoll observes that
the Fed has no authority to bail out European banks and warns of what
economists call “moral hazard” – the nasty habit of banks to engage in
even riskier behavior when they get bailed out.
Why
is this happening? Well, because the squid is strangling morality,
democracy, and the rule of law. We pay, they play. “This is an attempt
by our own governing elites to maintain a false vision of how the world
works, or how ‘we’ think it should work,” Todd told AlterNet. “This
comes at the expense of many people who never will go to Europe, who
know no European bankers, and who have no European bank accounts.”
You
may not know a European banker, but you can be sure that one is just
now raising a glass of bubbly in your honor. After all, you paid for it.
2. Record-breaking Political Finance
What does corporate dough buy? Newspapers and elections and presidents, oh my!
Thomas
Ferguson of the University of Massachusetts, Boston and the Institute
for New Economic Thinking suggested that next year’s very biggest
stories could well be about corporate money influencing politics. He
told AlterNet he saw a real possibility that a serious third party
candidate for president might emerge; if one does, it will be bankrolled
from the right while promoted in public as representing the political
“center.” And it will also be designed to give corporate America many of
the policies it has long sought, such a trimming Social Security and
eviscerating the social safety net. "People are going to be astonished
at how lethal the combination of secret money and corporate mass media
will be to the public’s interest," said Ferguson.
Ferguson
was confident that the 2012 elections would break all records for
political finance, but he did add a sobering qualification. He thought
there was an outside chance that the world economic slowdown would
provoke really serious unrest in China or Europe on a scale that would
put American developments in the shade.
3. Executive Pay Explosion
Since
the Great Recession of 2008-2009, the prime beneficiaries of the
sluggish recovery have been…you guessed it!....top corporate executives.
And it looks like the good times will keep rolling – for them. William
Lazonick, professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts,
Lowell, predicts an escalation of the harmful practice of corporate
stock buybacks, which produces the explosion in executive pay.
As
Lazonick explained to AlterNet, corporate honchos have enjoyed a
windfall as they have cashed in their stock options in a generally
rising stock market. This kind of thing does absolutely zilch for the
economy. But here’s what it does do: spending on buybacks makes
executives rich and results in manipulative boosts to stock prices in
the short-term at the cost of investments in innovation and job
creation. “Look for buybacks to continue to increase in 2012, perhaps
surpassing the record $600 billion done by S&P 500 companies in
2007,” predicted Lazonick.
What
to do? Maybe it’s time for Congress to confront the reality of that
predatory monster, the financialized business corporation. Lazonick
suggests that a ban on buybacks (which is already in the purview of the
Securities Exchange Act) would be a good start. Unfortunately this idea
is at odds with prediction #2.
4. Pathological Corporate Leadership
Jamie
Dimon never seems to seize an opportunity to keep his mouth shut. JP
Morgan's CEO, who happens to be the highest-paid chief executive officer
among the six biggest U.S. banks, has consequently regaled us with his
worldview, in which bank regulations are “anti-American”
and ordinary folks have no right to be mad at rich people. He has
become the poster-boy for Wall Street greed and has earned the especial ire of the Occupy movement, which recently marched to his digs on Park Avenue to offer to help him pack his bags and go wreak havoc somewhere else. In his universe,
defrauding investors, spreading lies to manipulate markets, and
foreclosing on military families are all part of a good day’s work.
Dimon
is a particularly nasty customer, but he is part of a new breed of
sociopathic financiers. And his kind of distorted ‘vision’ has harmed
the country’s prospects and created a gap in America between the richest and the poorest that puts us in close range of Rwanda and Serbia.
When
those at the top of the corporate pyramid are this tone-deaf and
lacking in any sense of public responsibility, we are in treacherous
waters.
“The biggest danger to
America is that the people in the financial sector and corporate
leadership convey no awareness of what is needed to create a coherent
and prosperous society,” economist Rob Johnson, head of the Institute
for New Economic Thinking, told AlterNet. “Leadership is not simply
about how much money one makes.”
Many
dollars. Very little sense. Ultimately, hoarding everything at the top
is not sustainable, and bankers like Dimon will end up destroying the
very society that makes their enormous wealth possible. If we let them.
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