author's website:
webofdebt.com
"Admit it, mes
amis, the rugged individualism and cutthroat capitalism
that made America the land of unlimited opportunity has
been shrink-wrapped by half a dozen short sellers in
Greenwich, Conn., and FedExed to Washington, D.C., to be
spoon-fed back to life by Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and
Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson. We’re now no different
from any of those Western European semi-socialist welfare
states that we love to deride."– Bill Saporito, "How
We Became the United States of France," Time
(September 21, 2008)
On October 15, the
Presidential candidates had their last debate before the
election. They talked of the baleful state of the economy and
the stock market; but omitted from the discussion was what
actually caused the credit freeze, and whether the banks
should be nationalized as Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson is
now proceeding to do. The omission was probably excusable,
since the financial landscape has been changing so fast that
it is hard to keep up. A year ago, the Dow Jones Industrial
Average broke through 14,000 to make a new all-time high.
Anyone predicting then that a year later the Dow would drop
nearly by half and the Treasury would move to nationalize the
banks would have been regarded with amused disbelief. But that
is where we are today.1
Congress hastily voted
to approve Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson’s $700 billion bank
bailout plan on October 3, 2008, after a tumultuous week in
which the Dow fell dangerously near the critical 10,000 level.
The market, however, was not assuaged. The Dow proceeded to
break through not only 10,000 but then 9,000 and 8,000,
closing at 8,451 on Friday, October 10. The week was called
the worst in U.S. stock market history.
On Monday, October 13,
the market staged a comeback the likes of which had not been
seen since 1933, rising a full 11% in one day. This happened
after the government announced a plan to buy equity interests
in key banks, partially nationalizing them; and the Federal
Reserve led a push to flood the global financial system with
dollars.
The reversal was
dramatic but short-lived. On October 15, the day of the
Presidential debate, the Dow dropped 733 points, crash landing
at 8,578. The reversal is looking more like a massive pump and
dump scheme – artificially inflating the market so insiders
can get out – than a true economic rescue. The real problem is
not in the much-discussed subprime market but is in the credit
market, which has dried up. The banking scheme itself has
failed. As was learned by painful experience during the Great
Depression, the economy cannot be rescued by simply propping
up failed banks. The banking system itself needs to be
overhauled.
A Litany of Failed
Rescue Plans
Credit has dried up
because many banks cannot meet the 8% capital requirement that
limits their ability to lend. A bank’s capital – the money it
gets from the sale of stock or from profits – can be fanned
into more than 10 times its value in loans; but this leverage
also works the other way. While $80 in capital can produce
$1,000 in loans, an $80 loss from default wipes out $80 in
capital, reducing the sum that can be lent by $1,000. Since
the banks have been experiencing widespread loan defaults,
their capital base has shrunk proportionately.
The bank bailout plan
announced on October 3 involved using taxpayer money to buy up
mortgage-related securities from troubled banks. This was
supposed to reduce the need for new capital by reducing the
amount of risky assets on the banks’ books. But the banks’
risky assets include derivatives – speculative bets on market
changes – and derivative exposure for U.S. banks is now
estimated at a breathtaking $180 trillion.2
The sum represents an impossible-to-fill black hole that is
three times the gross domestic product of all the countries in
the world combined. As one critic said of Paulson’s roundabout
bailout plan, "this seems designed to help Hank’s friends
offload trash, more than to clear a market blockage."3
By Thursday, October
9, Paulson himself evidently had doubts about his ability to
sell the plan. He wasn’t abandoning his old cronies, but he
soft-pedaled that plan in favor of another option buried in
the voluminous rescue package – using a portion of the $700
billion to buy stock in the banks directly. Plan B represented
a controversial move toward nationalization, but it was an
improvement over Plan A, which would have reduced capital
requirements only by the value of the bad debts shifted onto
the government’s books. In Plan B, the money would be spent on
bank stock, increasing the banks’ capital base, which could
then be leveraged into ten times that sum in loans. The plan
was an improvement but the market was evidently not convinced,
since the Dow proceeded to drop another thousand points from
Thursday’s opening to Friday’s close.
One problem with Plan
B was that it did not really mean nationalization
(public ownership and control of the participating banks).
Rather, it came closer to what has been called "crony
capitalism" or "corporate welfare." The bank stock being
bought would be non-voting preferred stock, meaning the
government would have no say in how the bank was run. The
Treasury would just be feeding the bank money to do with as it
would. Management could continue to collect enormous salaries
while investing in wildly speculative ventures with the
taxpayers’ money. The banks could not be forced to use the
money to make much-needed loans but could just use it to clean
up their derivative-infested balance sheets. In the end, the
banks were still liable to go bankrupt, wiping out the
taxpayers’ investment altogether. Even if $700 billion were
fanned into $7 trillion, the sum would not come close to
removing the $180 trillion in derivative liabilities from the
banks’ books. Shifting those liabilities onto the public purse
would just empty the purse without filling the derivative
black hole.
Plan C, the plan du
jour, does impose some limits on management compensation. But
the more significant feature of this week’s plan is the Fed’s
new "Commercial Paper Funding Facility," which is slated to be
operational on October 27, 2008. The facility would open the
Fed’s lending window for short-term commercial paper, the
money corporations need to fund their day-to-day business
operations. On October 14, the Federal Reserve Bank of New
York justified this extraordinary expansion of its lending
powers by stating:
"The CPFF is
authorized under Section 13(3) of the Federal Reserve Act,
which permits the Board, in unusual and exigent
circumstances, to authorize Reserve Banks to extend credit
to individuals, partnerships, and corporations that are
unable to obtain adequate credit accommodations. . . .
"The U.S. Treasury
believes this facility is necessary to prevent substantial
disruptions to the financial markets and the economy and
will make a special deposit at the New York Fed in support
of this facility."4
That means the
government and the Fed are now committing even more
public money and taking on even more public risk. The
taxpayers are already tapped out, so the Treasury’s "special
deposit" will no doubt come from U.S. bonds, meaning more debt
on which the taxpayers have to pay interest. The federal debt
could wind up running so high that the government loses its
own triple-A rating. The U.S. could be reduced to Third World
status, with "austerity measures" being imposed as a condition
for further loans, and hyperinflation running the dollar into
oblivion. Rather than solving the problem, these "rescue"
plans seem destined to make it worse.
The Collapse of a 300
Year Ponzi Scheme
All the king’s men
cannot put the private banking system together again, for the
simple reason that it is a Ponzi scheme that has reached its
mathematical limits. A Ponzi scheme is a form of pyramid
scheme in which new investors must continually be sucked in at
the bottom to support the investors at the top. In this case,
new borrowers must continually be sucked in to support the
creditors at the top. The Wall Street Ponzi scheme is built on
"fractional reserve" lending, which allows banks to create
"credit" (or "debt") with accounting entries. Banks are now
allowed to lend from 10 to 30 times their "reserves,"
essentially counterfeiting the money they lend. Over 97
percent of the U.S. money supply (M3) has been created by
banks in this way.5 The problem is that banks
create only the principal and not the interest necessary to
pay back their loans. Since bank lending is essentially the
only source of new money in the system, someone somewhere must
continually be taking out new loans just to create enough
"money" (or "credit") to service the old loans composing the
money supply. This spiraling interest problem and the need to
find new debtors has gone on for over 300 years -- ever since
the founding of the Bank of England in 1694 – until the whole
world has now become mired in debt to the bankers’ private
money monopoly. As British financial analyst Chris Cook
observes:
"Exponential
economic growth required by the mathematics of compound
interest on a money supply based on money as debt must
always run up eventually against the finite nature of
Earth’s resources."6
The parasite has
finally run out of its food source. But the crisis is not in
the economy itself, which is fundamentally sound – or would be
with a proper credit system to oil the wheels of production.
The crisis is in the banking system, which can no longer cover
up the shell game it has played for three centuries with other
people’s money. Fortunately, we don’t need the credit of
private banks. A sovereign government can create its own.
The New Deal Revisited
Today’s credit crisis
is very similar to that facing Franklin Roosevelt in the
1930s. In 1932, President Hoover set up the Reconstruction
Finance Corporation (RFC) as a federally-owned bank that would
bail out commercial banks by extending loans to them, much as
the privately-owned Federal Reserve is doing today. But like
today, Hoover’s plan failed. The banks did not need more
loans; they were already drowning in debt. They needed
customers with money to spend and to invest. President
Roosevelt used Hoover’s new government-owned lending facility
to extend loans where they were needed most – for housing,
agriculture and industry. Many new federal agencies were set
up and funded by the RFC, including the HOLC (Home Owners Loan
Corporation) and Fannie Mae (the Federal National Mortgage
Association, which was then a government-owned agency). In the
1940s, the RFC went into overdrive funding the infrastructure
necessary for the U.S. to participate in World War II, setting
the country up with the infrastructure it needed to become the
world’s industrial leader after the war.
The RFC was a
government-owned bank that sidestepped the privately-owned
Federal Reserve; but unlike the private banks with which it
was competing, the RFC had to have the money in hand before
lending it. The RFC was funded by issuing government bonds (I.O.U.s
or debt) and relending the proceeds. The result was to put the
taxpayers further into debt. This problem could be avoided,
however, by updating the RFC model. A system of public banks
might be set up that had the power to create credit
themselves, just as private banks do now. A public bank
operating on the private bank model could fan $700 billion in
capital reserves into $7 trillion in public credit that was
derivative-free, liability-free, and readily available to fund
all those things we think we don’t have the money for now,
including the loans necessary to meet payrolls, fund
mortgages, and underwrite public infrastructure.
Credit as a Public
Utility
"Credit" can and
should be a national utility, a public service provided by the
government to the people it serves. Many people are opposed to
getting the government involved in the banking system, but the
fact is that the government is already involved. A
modern-day RFC would actually mean less government
involvement and a more efficient use of the
already-earmarked $700 billion than policymakers are talking
about now. The government would not need to interfere with the
private banking system, which could carry on as before. The
Treasury would not need to bail out the banks, which could be
left to those same free market forces that have served them so
well up to now. If banks went bankrupt, they could be put into
FDIC receivership and nationalized. The government would then
own a string of banks, which could be used to service the
depository and credit needs of the community. There would be
no need to change the personnel or procedures of these
newly-nationalized banks. They could engage in "fractional
reserve" lending just as they do now. The only difference
would be that the interest on loans would return to the
government, helping to defray the tax burden on the populace;
and the banks would start out with a clean set of books, so
their $700 billion in startup capital could be fanned into $7
trillion in new loans. This was the sort of banking scheme
used in Benjamin Franklin’s colony of Pennsylvania, where it
worked brilliantly well. The spiraling-interest problem was
avoided by printing some extra money and spending it into the
economy for public purposes. During the decades the provincial
bank operated, the Pennsylvania colonists paid no
taxes, there was no government debt, and inflation did
not result.7
Like the Pennsylvania
bank, a modern-day federal banking system would not actually
need "reserves" at all. It is the sovereign right of a
government to issue the currency of the realm. What backs our
money today is simply "the full faith and credit of the United
States," something the United States should be able to issue
directly without having to draw on "reserves" of its own
credit. But if Congress is not prepared to go that far, a more
efficient use of the earmarked $700 billion than bailing out
failing banks would be to designate the funds as the
"reserves" for a newly-reconstituted RFC.
Rather than creating a
separate public banking corporation called the RFC, the
nation’s financial apparatus could be streamlined by simply
nationalizing the privately-owned Federal Reserve; but again,
Congress may not be prepared to go that far. Since there is
already successful precedent for establishing an RFC in times
like these, that model could serve as a non-controversial
starting point for a new public credit facility. The G-7
nations’ financial planners, who met in Washington D.C. this
past weekend, appear intent on supporting the banking system
with enough government-debt-backed "liquidity" to produce what
Jim Rogers calls "an inflationary holocaust." As the U.S.
private banking system self-destructs, we need to ensure that
a public credit system is in place and ready to serve the
people’s needs in its stead.
Ellen Brown, J.D., developed her research
skills as an attorney practicing civil litigation in Los
Angeles. In Web of Debt, her latest book, she turns those
skills to an analysis of the Federal Reserve and "the money
trust." She shows how this private cartel has usurped the
power to create money from the people themselves, and how we
the people can get it back. Her eleven books include the
bestselling Nature’s Pharmacy, co-authored with Dr.
Lynne Walker, and Forbidden Medicine. Her websites are
www.webofdebt.com and
www.ellenbrown.com.