STRATEGY

STOP THE MONEY FLOW OF INJUSTICE


Liberty!

Before we can make a better world we need to free all Americans and give democracy back to the people. Read more

It is time for all concerned with social and economic justice to unite and realize that there is a common root cause for the problems we face: Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan. Why Greenspan? —It’s the money, the money he created plus the nation’s apparent obsession with the market that are causing many of our ills here and abroad. The money that has helped fund USA multinational corporations, created records levels of wealth inequality and became a cash cow for initiatives and think tanks to push their own special interest(s) —all of which have undermined democracy. He also has helped fuel what the ‘Economist’ magazine has described as a financial bubble of proportions comparable to the Japanese bubble of the 1980’s. In the "Debt Trap’, January 27, 2001 the Economist notes; ‘ Japan, in short is not unique. America is but one more example of an age-old phenomenon, in which rapid increases in asset prices encourage credit binge and over investment that prove unsustainable one asset prices fall'. Our attention is focused on Greenspan not because of his position – we are not interested in blasting the powerful simply because they are powerful -- rather, because of the way he has, in our opinion, abused his position of power to the detriment of the majority of the citizens of this country. As the chairman of the federal reserve, it is his responsibility to regulate bank policy and U.S. monetary policy not influence politics or manipulate the stock market. (An in depth presentation of our case appears in "It’s Time to Clip the Federal Reserve Chairman’s Wings" in the next section.)

Has the emphasis on markets and big business been accomplished fairly and democratically? Have the rich gotten richer at the expense of the little guy? Think of the actions and targets progressives are pursuing. —follow the money flow—it all leads back to the USA Federal Reserve. ‘It’s the market, stupid.’ And we’d better wake up to this reality real fast, because the market is falling even faster and the last thing, the very last thing, we need is to have the guys that created the bubble and broke our country’s back be in charge of the restoration!


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FOLLOW THE MONEY

$ Economic injustice- The rising stock market and economy have failed to lift all boats and have instead led to record levels of wealth and income inequality. For example, the Economic Policy Institute, ‘Wage and Income Trends—Up the Down Escalator’, noted; "wages became more unequal between 1979 and 1999—the rich got a richer and the poor became poorer.’ Professor Edward Wolff of NYU (Recent Trends in Wealth Ownership, 1983-1998, April 2000) says that, ‘‘Wealth inequality continued to rise from 1989 to 1998…40% of USA citizens saw their net worth decline between 1983 to 1998.’

$ Social Injustice- Rising wealth inequality and emphasis on a market economy give power to the rich to control the political process to their advantage, leaving the bulk of the U.S. population out in the cold.

Buying Power!

"What made corruption of the 1980's and 1990's rank with the Gilded Age was not the individual scandals of the Reagan, Bush, or Clinton years…The new crux was the vast, relentless takeover of U. S. politics and policymaking by large donors to federal campaigns and propaganda organs." Pg 322, Wealth and Democracy, Kevin Phillips, Broadway Books, 2002

$ Globalization—The stock market has been a cash cow for overseas plunder by U.S. corporations. Further under the auspices of the Federal Reserve we have had mega mergers in the financial services industry. The financial giants have taken it upon themselves to spread the gospel of U.S. Capitalism around the globe and help fund their corporate brethren. These USA financial institutions dominate all measures of financial prowess from merger and acquisition activity to underwriting to trading to derivatives as noted by financial industry standards (source - various). The power of our new global financial colossi has become enormous. While much of the world stands behind the spirit of Jubilee 2000 and forgiving the debt of developing countries, our new global financial players are bound by neither conscience nor regulation—it’s an open playing field out there. So noted the Bank of International Settlements (BIS) Quarterly Review March 2001-International banking and financial market developments: ‘The third quarter of 2000 saw emerging market countries deposit a record $54 billion with banks that report to the BIS. In contrast to the 1970s, when petrodollars deposited with international banks had supported an increase in cross-border lending to developing countries, recent deposit flows were not recycled back into those countries.’ Back home in the United States when you take money from a community and don’t invest back into the community it is a variant of redlining and it is against the law!

$ Corporate Welfare, Soft money, Campaign Contributions— Money has taken over our political process and undermined democracy. It is what William Greider in Who Will Tell The People: The Betrayal of American Democracy calls democracy-for-hire; (page 39) 'This is democracy and it costs a fortune. Democracy-for-hire smother the contemporary political debates and, while it does not always prevail, relatively few Americans have the resources to hire a voice for themselves.’ The process, or the flow of money and kickbacks, goes like this. Campaign contributions influence political decision making and legislation, which creates pork. Pork encompasses a variety of things from government contracts, perks, tax abatements and credits, tariffs, etc.—all of which increases a corporation’s revenues. Increased revenues mean increased profits. Increased profits benefits shareholders. And don’t forget the wealthiest 5% of Americans own 80% of corporate USA'<.

$ Right Wing Radical Initiatives: The booming stock market has been a bonanza for right wing initiatives and think tanks. In "Buying a Movement: right-wing Foundations and American Politics" People for the American Way, 1996; notes in its Executive Summary; ‘Each year, conservative foundations pour millions of dollars into a broad range of conservative political organizations. These foundation gifts are remarkable for two principal reasons: first, their sheer size and concentration; second the willingness of the foundations to promote a highly politicized agenda by funding a broad range of organizations…The grants have created and nurtured an enormous range of organizations all bent on promoting a far-right-wing agenda. Recipients of foundation largesse include the right-wing media; national "think-tanks" and advocacy groups; conservative university programs; conservative college newspapers; conservative scholars and more. In many of these funding areas, progressive and mainstream foundation giving lags far behind…. Spectator magazine, which led the charge on President Bill Clinton’s state trooper contretemps and launched a slash-and-burn strategy targeting Anita Hill, is a prime recipient of foundation support.’

It is very difficult to quantify exactly how much such conservative initiatives have benefited from the stock market bubble. But what we can do is look at how the stock market bubble benefited overall foundation giving and use it as a proxy. The New York Times, March 27, 2001, ‘Foundation Grants Surged Last Year Despite Slowing Economy’, in speaking about the The Foundation Center’s Annual report (2000) noted;

From 1995 to 1999, foundation assets nearly doubled, to $449.6 billion from $226.7 billion, the report said. (Note this surge coincided with the most recent leg of the bull market beginning in 1995)
Without question, it has been an extraordinary era for philanthropy, with billions of dollars a year in new gifts flowing into existing foundations, some 10,000 new foundations formed, and vast gains in the value of the holdings of the largest independent foundations.
Whereas philanthropy tended to operate at the margins of policy throughout the 1970’s, 80’s and early 90’s—with most foundations dividing up grant money to support pilot studies, research reports or small community-based programs—donors today increasingly practice "high impact" philanthropy, in which they look to transform an entire field.’

$ Other—Its all about the money-pick an issue and follow the money trail. Take environmental Abuses The quest for money has blinded us to the damage we do to our environment – the payoff in Alaska is one example; the influence of corporations over legislation (PORK) regulating environmental standards, such as CO2 emissions, etc.

Activist Cash

Click on to see how Money follows money!

America has been put at risk, and the evidence appears to point directly at Federal Reserve Chairman Greenspan as the chief risk-taker. He has taken us all for a ride; some unwillingly, some enticed by visions of fortunes, many unwittingly set on a fatal path. The financial position of our country overall and of U.S. citizens collectively has never been worse. What we must realize is the difference between what we make and what we have in the bank. As a country we have been making a lot, but we are in debt up to our eyeballs—and we’re about to lose our jobs! How did we ever get in this position—did we vote on it? No. Was it the decision of an un-elected, unaccountable career bureaucrat abusing his position of power and taking it upon himself to do as he thought best? Yes!









It’s Time To Clip Federal Reserve Chairman Greenspan’s Wings

By madis senner, CPA

"How can it be, at a time of unprecedented faith in free markets, that we even think a government authority might have such strength? And how can it be that the world’s monetary order rests on the shoulders of an individual, much admired but still fallible economist?

"The answer is America’s uniquely flawed and outdated monetary law, which gives the nation’s monetary chief the sort of discretion of which his peers in other developed countries can only dream. Mr. Greenspan is so powerful that today he is perceived as a loving dictator. This is only natural. For as we know from history, wherever the law is weak—in any area of politics—public credibility tends to vest itself in an individual.’

Amity Shlaes, ‘Financial Times of London’, January 9, 2001, COMMENT & ANALYSIS: A fitting legacy for America’s beloved dictator: The legislation guiding US interest rate policy is flawed. Alan Greenspan should lead a reform effort before he retires.

Our country's psyche is dominated by war. The money flow of injustice we just talked about seems to rallying around the flag with the rest of us--Not true. The fact is, nothing has really changed, the 'democracy for hire' William Grieder talked about is still at work. War is only the recent machination of the power of self-interest to exert their control over democracy. (If history is any teacher then it is clear that special interests and injustice have increased their stranglehold over democracy. (See Truman Committee) Whose interest does war represent? Who wants us to wage war? Maybe the age-old axiom 'war is good for the economy' gives us a clue.

While it appears that President Bush is strongly in charge of America in a temple culture ruled by money and the market it is its high priest, the Federal Reserve and its Chairman Alan Greenspan that rule--not the king, President Bush. We need only go back to the 1992 presidential election to see the enormous power the Federal Reserve yields. Candidate Clinton's slogan was; 'It's the economy, stupid.' The bad economy was going to keep President Bush (Number 41) from getting reelected-as if nothing else mattered. Further, some have openly admitted that they think it was Greenspan's tight money that kept Bush from serving a second term.

Federal Reserve Chairman Greenspan has been allowed to overstep the bounds of his office and put our country on a potentially fatal path. It is time Chairman Greenspan had his wings clipped.

It was stated earlier that we believe Chairman Greenspan has abused his power. We do. "Abuse" is a harsh word, and we do not throw it around lightly. As the Fed Chair, his responsibility is solely to regulate monetary policy and banking oversight. We are not alone in noticing that influence previously accorded to elected officials has, somehow, shifted into the hands of the Federal Reserve.

The Federal Reserve, the central bank of the United States, was founded by Congress in 1913 to provide the nation with a safer, more flexible, and more stable monetary and financial system.

Today the Federal Reserve's duties fall into four general areas:
(1) conducting the nation's monetary policy;
(2) supervising and regulating banking institutions and protecting the credit rights of consumers;
(3) maintaining the stability of the financial system; and
(4) providing certain financial services to the U.S. government, the public, financial institutions, and foreign official institutions

Source Federal Reserve

Robert B. Reich, writing in The American Prospect, notes how the downsizing of government has diminished the influence of fiscal policy and increase the power of monetary policy:

"In the old days, when America still had a fiscal policy to speak of (that is, when presidents and Congress could spur the economy through public spending)…the FOMC’s decisions were important, although not dominant. Now, they are definitive. In a previous era, it was possible for elected officials in America to fashion a host of domestic policies affecting jobs, wages, the poverty rate, public spending on health and education, and access to homes and cars, to take but a few examples. Candidates for national office occasionally took positions on such issues; there was occasional public debate about them; laws were even passed".
"Now, much of this is beside the point. Domestic policy is handmaiden to the bond market. The level of unemployment, the rate of wage growth, the poverty rate, and access to money for homes, cars, and for a large share of the cost of high education depend on the rate of interest. And what happens to interest rates, both short-term and long-term, depends largely on the decisions made by the FOMC".
"In an earlier era, America had a foreign policy as well, and an apparatus for setting it and keeping it on course: a State Department staffed with career diplomats and managed by political appointees; a National Security Council linking State and Defense Departments and providing the president with independent advice and analyses; and a national security adviser I the White House itself, to coordinate all of it. But now American foreign policy depends largely on global flows of money, and our apparatus for trying to influence these flows has almost nothing to do with the old apparatus. Here, too, decisions of the FOMC are increasingly important". (Robert B. Reich, "The Bankers’ Regime," The American Prospect vol. 9, No. 41, November 1, 1998 – December 1, 1998)

Markets and Democracy are Incompatible

"Democracy and market economics are not the same thing. Worse, the attemps to confuse and conflate them in pretended equivalence stood out at the millennium as a destructive aspect of U.S. Politics...
Much of the late-twentieth century failure was deliberate: the continued and heavily funded effort, over two decades of private interest exaltation, to displace the founders' repbulican arena of civic virtue and political engagement with the marketplace of economic self...
Ultimately, the guideposts of a market-based society never seem to progress beyond tautology: policies that advance markets are good and efficient because they advance markets. The raw logic of blurring the marketplace and polity, however, boils down to a disturbing simplicity: one dollar, one vote. Inequality is the natural law of the cash driven marketplace. The more you have, the more you can buy. Buying is good. The more you can buy, the more validating your acts.
The next jump is more perverse. Merge politics with the marketplace and buying becomes the game: one dollar, one vote, ten dollars, ten votes." pgs 417-419 Wealth and Democracy, Kevin Phillips, Broadway Books, 2002

Both the left and right are crying foul. Talk show Bill O’Reilly of Fox News’ ‘O’Reilly Factor’ in his "Talking Points" column on March 16, 2001 voiced what many think:

"The danger is not a short-term recession which we are having. The danger is unbridled power and keeping Americans in the dark. I don’t want to depend upon Alan Greenspan. I don’t trust him. He’s a shadowy guy who will not explain his policies. I want the Fed chief and all government economic people to hold press Conferences and answer questions. So we the people know what’s going on".

Look at the policies and actions of the Fed Chairman. On Wednesday, January 3rd,2001, the Federal Reserve changed monetary policy by lowering the federal funds rate one half of a percent and the discount rate by one-quarter point. Chairman Greenspan made the abrupt change from tightening to easing in a highly unusual way—in between Fed meetings. Why? Was it a daring rescue to save the nation from recession, or an effort to protect big businesses and the wealthy? Most prognosticators have attributed Mr. Greenspan’s action to signs of a slowing economy. A statement by the Federal Open Market Committee cited "further weakening of sales and production,….lower consumer confidence, tight conditions in some segments of financial markets and high energy prices sapping household and business purchasing power" as the reasons. The economy did slow afterwards. But two days after the cut the market was surprised to learn that the Bank of America held a lot of loans from troubled California utilities.

THE MYSTERIOUS FEDERAL RESERVE
"They (congress) have created a very unusual agency in the whole Fed system".

  • "It’s exempt from normal government appropriations,
  • It doesn’t have to wait for Congress because it has its own money that continues to work around.
  • It’s exempt from GAO looking at its monetary situation.
  • It’s even exempt from part of the Freedom of Information Act".

"And so it’s got this mystery to it".

Doris Kearns Goodwin, "The News Hour with Jim Lehrer", PBS, March 20, 2001

Again, why did the FED act so unusually by taking such a rapid about face? We may never know the full story. The New York Times questioned the chairman’s timing in an article published the following day (p. C9 "Federal Reserve, Reacting to Signals of a Slowdown, Cuts Rates"):

"It is unclear why Alan Greenspan, the Fed chairman, chose to act yesterday instead of waiting until the next regular meeting at the end of the month – whether he knew something about the economy not evident to everyone else".
We may never know what was or was not evident to the chairman because the Federal Reserve is an independent agency answering to no one, not even the president. The law doesn’t compel him to account to anyone for his decisions. Perhaps, several months from now, we may hear the complete rationale, should the Fed Chairman divulge his intentions in the minutes of a FED meeting or, later, in Humphrey Hawkins testimony to the senate. But then, there is the problem of Greenspeak, the term used to describe the often-cryptic phrases Chairman Greenspan typically employs in speeches. If this seems unduly suspicious of a man who is being hailed as a champion just now, consider the actions Mr. Greenspan has taken in the past. The "maestro" takes risks. Consider this incident, reported in the Times Book Review ("Alan Greenspan and the Temple of Boom"). Robert Kuttner writes:
"Two months after Greenspan took office in August 1987, the stock market lost over 22 percent of its value in a day. The nation’s largest financial institutions, thinly capitalized and in debt to one another, can collapse if money markets seize up for lack of buyers or lenders. Greenspan, working closely with E. Gerald Corrigan, president of the New York Fed, embarked on a course far more interventionist than his onetime mentor, the free-market apostle Ayn Rand, might have commended. Woodward [the biographer Bob Woodward] explains just how Corrigan discreetly instructed bank executives to keep lending to momentarily insolvent debtors. The Fed would back them up".
"All this was illegal and, if it didn’t work, could violate countless fiduciary duties and prudent-man rules. But it was precisely what the Fed had failed to do in 1929. This time, the system held.".

"This time" the system held. what happens next time? Are we willing to take that risk?

The 1987 stock market bailout is not a question of judgement—but ethics. Kuttner implies illegality. Did Greenspan abuse his power? Unfortunately most of the investigations after the crash dealt with why we had the crash and how to prevent crashes. Most notable were the recommendations of then Treasury Secretary Brady that established measures such as trading limits and stoppage in trading to prevent a collapse in the stock market. Few – if any—asked whether Greenspan had done anything wrong.

Some have argued that Alan Greenspan is the most powerful man in the world. In the preface to his book Maestro: Greenspan’s Fed and the American Boom (Simon and Schuster, 2000) Bob Woodward expresses the perspective of many Americans: "On January 20, 2001, a new president takes the oath of office. He assumes the presidency in a Greenspan era". Clearly Woodward is exalting praise for the chief and giving him his due. But Woodward’s statement carries a much greater truth: that the presidency is in some ways in subservient to the Chairman of the Federal Reserve. Our elected President George W. Bush is a mere elected government official in the shadow of the regal czar like Greenspan.

The Czar’s personal political views have shaped his responses to White House economic initiatives. When President Bush in his first week in office talked about his tax cut, the supposed neutral Federal Reserve Chairman nodded his approval. In testimony on March 2, 2001 he reiterated his preference:

"For reasons I have testified to previously, if long-term fiscal stability is the criterion, it is far better, in my judgment, that the surpluses be lowered by tax reductions than by spending increases".
The new president rejoiced. Greenspan had sanctioned the tax cut plan! All was well.

In fact, surplus projections have not changed much since the last time Greenspan spoke. What has changed is the administration. During the Clinton era, the right-leaning Greenspan was afraid of spending hikes—a prospect he helped ward off with his advocacy of debt reduction.

If Greenspan is so concerned with government spending why hasn’t he supported campaign finance reform that would cut back on pork barrel spending!

The New Republic took note:

"Greenspan’s endorsement carried such political weight in part because he had spent the previous eight years urging fiscal restraint. And so his dramatic turnaround is taken evidence that the budgetary outlook must have changed dramatically".
Now, with a Republican in the White House, he no longer needs to use fiscal conservatism as an argument against spending increases and can feel free to push for tax cuts." (‘The Pathetic Party’ February 12, 2001). Paul Krugman in ‘Et Tu, Alan’ (New York Times, January 28, 2001) voiced similar concerns in talking about Greenspan’s endorsement of President Bush’s tax cut proposal; ‘It was hard to avoid the impression that Mr. Greenspan’s intent was to give aid and comfort to the new administration, while retaining plausible deniability.’ Or was the Chairman trying to maintain his new power base, as described earlier by Reich, through reducing fiscal outlays – the idea being that the less government spends the more influential the Fed becomes? Whatever his reason, the supposed ‘independent Fed’ was clearly being political.

"The Fed’s mandate, as defined by the 1978 Employment and Balanced Growth Act, is to maintain maximum employment and economic growth in the USA, consistent with low inflation."

‘The workings of the FOMC’, Financial Times of London, March 20, 2001 Peronet Despeignes

Okay, so he’s a Republican—the kind that he makes President Bush truly a Compassionate Conservative in comparison. Consider Mr. Greenspan’s favorite statistic: The Employment Cost Index. What is it and why does he fret over it? It measures worker wage gains on a quarterly basis and he looks at it because he is concerned that worker wage gains will lead to inflation. He wants to make sure that he snuffs out any dramatic rise in wages that will lead to inflation. But not all wage increases meet his disapproval. Not the inflation in the stock market that has seen the stock market increase tenfold under his reign. Nor the wage inflation in executive salaries which has seen average CEO wages go from 80 times the size of an average worker’s to 475 times average factory wages. No—it’s the inflation in the salaries of wage earners, people that are paid by the hour that he is concerned with. You know, the guys and gals with no or little money in the stock market.

Productivity Gains: Chairman Greenspan has waxed poetic on how productivity gains have transformed the economy to our benefit. But Herbert Lovelace "The New Sweat Equity’, InformationWeek, May 8, 2000 questions the source of all those technological advances that have created the productivity gains Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan talks about; ‘.maybe most of it comes from putting those microchips and fiber-optic goodies into cell phones, voice mail and notebook computers so people can work as close to 24 hours a day as possible. What happened to free time?’

Although Greenspan may not be compassionate to the little guy, he makes up for it to the rich. It’s not surprising that he would favor President Bush’s tax cut which would have the top 1% of income earners get 40% of the benefits. Senator Bernie Sanders, during a banking committee hearing on July 25, 2000, questioned Greenspan about his prejudiced outlook: Sanders said,

"It’s dead wrong to continue to talk about a so-called ‘booming economy’ for all Americans when millions are finding it difficult to survive economically. The truth is that while the wealthiest have never had it so good, millions of people are working longer hours for lower real wages than 25 years ago. The purchasing power of the minimum wage is far lower than it used to be and a large number of people who want to work full time can only find part-time to temporary jobs with limited or no benefits. Meanwhile, more than 20% of our children live in poverty, millions of elderly cannot afford their medications, 44 million Americans do not have health insurance and there is a growing housing crisis in cities throughout the country." (‘Sanders to Greenspan; Do Not Overlook Millions of American Not Benefiting From So-Called "Booming Economy").
But Greenspan’s view of seeing things differently is not surprising given some within the Federal Reserve system such as Michael Cox economist of the Federal Reserve’s Dallas office who contend that the poverty statistics Representative Bernie Sanders is talking about are grossly inflated (see Myths of Rich and Poor ,Richard Alm and Michael Cox).

Bailouts feed our primal instincts and encourage predatory behavior. Investors have become so conditioned to bailouts that they rush in to buy every calamity caused dip in the stock market knowing full well that Fed will come to the rescue. They have learned to relish someone else's misery is their opportunity to plunder. They have come to embrace a Temple Culture of Sacrifice.

Consider the bailout of Long Term Capital Management (LTCM), a highly speculative investment pool that pursues some of the riskiest strategies and investments possible. It was headed up by ex trader/banker John Meriwether, employed 2 Nobel Laureates in Economics and a host of the best and brightest. It was Wall Street’s version of the Dream Team (‘Dream Team’, Business Week, Leah Nathans Spiro, August 29, 1994) Unfortunately, the gods of highflying finance were mere mortals and became insolvent in 1998. To quote the Wall Street Journal, ‘Long-Term Capital Bailout Spotlights a Fed "Radical"’, November 2, 1998):

"The fear of "this layer cake becoming unglued" and putting the world’s financial markets at risk, as Mr. Fisher puts it, led him and his boss, New York Fed President William McDonough, to round up the biggest names on Wall Street to inject $3.625 billion into Long-Term Capital a few days later."
Criticism over the bailout of Long Term Capital came from all sides, even from the market’s strongest supporters such as the Wall Street Journal. Yet, instead of focusing our attention on the travails of LTCM, mainstream media was titillating us with the more saleable saga of Monica L. and President Bill.

Why did Greenspan bail out LTCM? Was it because, as The Times of London said,

"Hedge Fund Managers, unlike Javanese peasants, are the sort of people investment bankers have lunch with…Even closer links now emerge. Directors and seniors at Merrill Lynch were, by almost anyone else’s standards, heavy investors in LTCM, one of the few hedge funds recommended by their firm…. Merrill protests that the personal interests of its own decision-makers had nothing to do with decision of keeping LTCM afloat. Given the role of Mr. Greenspan, this is wholly plausible." (September 30, 1998, ‘Crony Capitalism Stalks the Street’)

Bailouts for the Rich and tough times for the poor rewards devotees of the market who have come to embrace and learn the machinations of the temple culture of high finance. Join us or else…!

But the bailout goes beyond privilege and special interests. It tears at the very fabric of what we hold for truth in a market economy--or at least what the powers that be claim to be the truth. With the Asian contagion in 1997, Treasury Secretary Rubin and Undersecretary Summers talked about the contagion being a function of ‘crony capitalism’, the unethical and political ties between government and business. Kathryn M. Welling, in ‘Up & Down Wall Street: Crony Capitalism?’, Barrons, September 28, 1998 notes:

"CRONY CAPITALISM, AMERICAN STYLE? That the scene of the crime was one of the New York Fed’s posh, polished and paneled meeting rooms and not some teeming Hong Kong back or an outpost of the Kremlin kleptocracy makes no difference, say the cynics. What else to you call it when the Fed corrals the fat cats at the helms of the Street’s biggest banks and brokerage houses all into one elegant room—and doesn’t let them out until they (with only a few rather conspicuous exceptions) agree to equally divy up the tab on a $3.5 billion dollar bailout of a hedge fund formed by former colleagues."
Allan Sloan in ‘What Goes Around’ in Newsweek, October 12, 1998 adds:
"THE COLLAPSE AND RESCUE OF the biggest hedge fund in the United States shows how dangerous preaching can be. For 15 months, as financial markets in country after country collapsed like straw huts in a typhoon, the united states lectured the rest of the world on the evils of crony capitalism—of bailing out rich, connected insiders while letting everyone else suffer. U. S. officials and financiers talked about letting market forces allocate capital for maximum efficiency. Thai peasants, Korean Steel workers and Moscow pensioners may suffer horribly as their local economies and currencies collapse—but we solemnly told them that was a cost they had to pay for the greater good of the world. Capital should be free to flow to the places where it gets the highest and best use. Cronyism is bad. Capitalism is good.

How does the bailout of LTCM and other bailouts jive with Greenspan’s prophetic vision of capitalism—It does not! Here are his own words, spoken in 1998:

"Market economies have succeeded over the centuries by thoroughly weeding out the inefficient and poorly equipped…But maintaining the kind of social safety net that, for example, is prevalent in most continental European countries where high unemployment appears chronic is proving increasingly problematic in today’s altered environment". (Remarks by Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan before the Annual Convention of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, Washington D. C., April 2, 1998, 'The Ascendance of Market Capitalism')

And the previous year, speaking at the Woodrow Wilson Award Dinner of the Woodrow International Center for Scholars, on June 10, 1997, Chairman heralded the triumph of free markets:

"The long-standing debate between the virtues of economies organized around free markets and those governed by centrally planned socialism is essentially at an end…Centrally planned economies are frozen in time…In sharp contrast, capitalist market economies are driven by what Professor Joseph Schumpter, a number of decades ago, called ‘creative destruction’. . Market economies in that sense are continuously renewing themselves. Innovation, risk taking, and competition are the driving forces that propel standards of living progressively higher."

Obviously, Chairman Greenspan does not practice what he preaches. He wants less government spending which would reduce the safety nets for the poor, but he bails out the rich. He talks about the failure of Central Planning Committees but under his tutelage the Wall Street Journal has called the 1990’s ‘ the decade of Moral Hazard for all its Bailouts’.

A bubble breeds RED INK as a feeling of ‘irrational exuberance’ clouds people’s thinking and encourages speculation and borrowing,

  • The Net International Investment Position of the USA was positive when Greenspan took over in 1987, in 1998 it had a deficit of $1.5 trillion (1998) (BIS 2000 annual report)
  • In 1998 the savings rate in the USA turned negative for the first time since the Great Depression.
  • Consumer debt is at record levels.
  • Mortgage Debt is at record levels. People have been borrowing against their homes. Equity in homes fell from 69.8% (1982) to 54% (2000), FT "Record US mortgage Debt’, Feb. 15, 2001, Gary Silverman

But bailouts have a much more insidious side, they encourage speculation and play to humanity’s greed and destructive tendencies. "Wednesday night’s bailout of Long-Term Capital Management, a highflying hedge fund, has the smell of $3.5 billion worth of moral hazard. Here we have the Federal Reserve Bank of New York parading all the big securities houses to pony up so that the fund’s investors don’t take a bath in 1998 after having earned 17.1% last year, 40.8% in 1996 and 42.8% in 1995. Wheee, the lesson runs, throw money at hedge funds, and leverage being the only way anyone can generate 40% returns. Don’t worry about the risk. So what if bets placed by Long-Term Capital got caught by a worldwide flight to quality following the Russian default. When the margin calls arrive, the government will work something our for you." ‘Decade of Moral Hazard’. Editorial column Wall Street Journal, September 25, 1998.

The recent stock market decline has highlighted how distorted our thinking has become. Jonathan Fuerbringer in "Market Place: Awaiting Fed Rescue, Even as Fed Discourages Dependency’, New York Times, March 15, 2001 notes, "the impact of these rescues can be heard in an odd Wall Street refrain these days: The economy is not slowing enough? As if that were good for stocks….The reasoning would seem simple. Investors think that rate cuts are the surest way to ensure that the economic slowdown will reverse and, therefore, make it safe to pile into stocks again.’ In other words, someone else’s misery is my opportunity.

We cannot begin to measure how distorted our thinking and actions have become as we have sacrificed all to the god we call the market. The Bubble and the Bailouts have fostered spirits of recklessness, selfishness, and callous disregard for the welfare of others as we rush along in the pursuit of money. How can we begin to measure our sickness? Consider this: The Wall Street Journal together with the Heritage Foundation compiled a survey measuring ‘The most economically free countries" in the world. The premise is that financial security leads to overall well being and, therefore, countries offering the greatest degree of economic freedom are the healthiest. Sadly, some of the most economically free countries are also the most violent. The World competitiveness Yearbook 1999 found that America, New Zealand and Australia, which have consistently ranked in the top of economic freedom also ranked in the top ten of most violent countries (1996) as measured by serious crime—Number of murders, violent crimes or armed robberies per 100,000 inhabitants. The statistic might not be representative as it measures reported crime only and not all of the top ranked most economically free countries were also high crime countries. But the statistics does give pause for concern. It is time we asked ourselves are the risks of a wild Wild West market economy worth it?

But the risks and injustices to the American people does not end with the creation of the stock market bubble. The Fed is also responsible for the oversight of the banking industry. Under the Greenspan era we have had mega mergers in the financial services industry. Alan Sloan raises the right question in, ‘Bailout of a Big Failure Raises Big Questions About Too-big-to- Fail Policy’, Washington Post, September 29, 1998:

‘And members of Congress might ask whether letting giant financial institutions combine is really such a good idea. Ironically, the same day that the Fed brokered a deal because long-term Capital was too big to fail, it approved the merger of Citicorp and Travelers Group Inc. Citicorp alone was deemed too big to fail when it got in big trouble a decade ago. The new $750 billion Citigroup will be so gigantic that it will put "too big to fail" into a whole new dimension.’ If Greenspan is so concerned about the risk large financial institutions pose if they run into problems why did he approve the Citigroup—Travelers merger? Was he too caught up in dealing with LTCM? Or was he like the rest of us focused on Monica and Bill?

Recent Financial Mergers

  • Citicorp/Travelers merger the integration of a money center commercial bank with a major insurance and securities firm.
  • Nations Bank / Bank of America merger of two major regional banks.
  • Bank One/First Chicago merger a consolidation within a region.
  • Washington Mutual/Great Western and Home Savings merger created the largest S + L.
  • Household/Beneficial merger of two large consumer finance companies.
  • Chase/JP Morgan merger of two big money center banks.

Source: Congress and others

Were these giant conglomerates necessary to compete in our newly evolving global financial arena? Obviously Chairman Greenspan thinks so. During congressional briefings because of his power and sway Greenspan has been able to convince Congress that all is well. Martin Crutsinger, AP News, ‘Greenspan urges Free-market view of mergers’, June 16, 1998 notes such in Greenspan testimony on such date;

" Greenspan was the leadoff witness as the Senate Judiciary Committee heard from the government’s top antitrust officials in a hearing to determine how the recent spate of mergers would affect American consumers and the economy overall…Some members of Congress have expressed concerns that a number of big bank mergers could force consumers to pay higher bank fees because of reduced competition. But Greenspan said while the wave of bank mergers had reduced the level of banks nationally, the number of competing in any given region of the country remained about the same."
Later he went on to talk about globalization;
"Greenspan told the committee that these was no doubt that some of the recent mergers were "awesomely huge" but he said that was a factor of the growth of the overall economy and the increased forces of globalization, which are pushing banks and other financial institutions to consolidate to compete better worldwide.'

The issue of bank mergers is not just about size but also the type of combinations. Writing about the Travelers Citigroup merger notes Time Picayune Publishing Company September 22, 1998 ‘The marriage of a gigantic U. S. bank with a large diversified insurance and securities arm hasn’t happened since Depression-era laws mandated separation of such activities. The merger could set a precedent for the type of modern financial services company that Congress could allow if it passes proposed bank reform legislation."

But the average Jane and Joe does not have to wait for these conglomerates to have problems before they have to pay. Steven a. Holmes in ‘Huge Bank Mergers Worry Consumer Groups’, New York Times, April 19, 1998 notes such:

‘Our general view is straightforward,’ said Ed Mierzwinski, director of consumer programs for the United Sates Public Interest Group, an advocacy organization. ‘the bigger banks use monopoly power to charge higher fees. Basically, the mergers create fewer choices for consumers. Fewer choices mean less competition and more monopoly consolidation of power.’

It should also be pointed out that many of the financial conglomerates have credit card subsidiaries that stand to substantially benefit from the new bankruptcy law. A law that many say was won with soft money. Commercial banks ranked 10th out of 80 industries while the Securities Industry ranked 3rd for campaign contributions as measured by the Center for Responsive Politics (2000).

It is time we removed the Fed’s independence and made it a cabinet appointment or an elected post. An independent FED goes against the tenets of democracy this country was founded upon. It violates the concept of checks and balances which was intended to prevent one branch of government (executive, judicial, legislative) from becoming tyrannical and controlling the other branches to suit its needs. The original intent, I believe, was to keep the Reserve free from partisan influences, so that its decisions would clearly benefit the nation as a whole, not a special interest. Clearly, that is not happening here. De facto, Greenspan not only has seized the day but is running wild with it—and created a fourth branch of government answering to no one except, perhaps, his own conscience.

Chairman Greenspan has become a tyrant. Going against the tenets of the free market economy he so cherishes, he continually has bailed out money loosing organizations, countries and even speculators to such an extent that the Wall Street journal called the 1990’s the "Decade of Moral Hazard." He has presided over a policy of double standards that favors large financial institutions and speculators to the detriment of the rest of America.

We had better move fast the financial markets are crumbling and with the global economies slowing we may no longer be able to finance our record current account with the kindness of foreigners money. The Greenspan stock market bubble poses a big threat. Should troubles appear we must not let Alan fix them—his gig is up! And we must say NO! When the large financial conglomerates try to hold us hostage with their too big too fail threats. It is imperative we reestablish democratic order and not let corporate interests undermine democracy. We must regain control. We must collectively decide how things should be fixed—not some un-elected bureaucrat.

By now, you should know why we have an independent Fed: the markets like it. It’s the economy, or the market, stupid. It’s actually the power of money, the power of control, making sure that money does not loose its store of value. Nothing matters more than money—not jobs, not the suffering poor, not the health of the economy. The saddest thing is that by casting our lot with the market and the Fed we have done more than undermine democracy. We have let the Fed establish new values for us and influence how we live in this country. We may not believe that money is the number one priority. We may believe that loving your neighbor, loving justice, loving mercy, are more important than making a profit.

Progressives need to start focusing their efforts on reducing the power and changing the focus of the Federal Reserve to serve all Americans. All of the economic disparities and injustices that many of us see in the world are rooted in the actions of Fed chairman Greenspan. It is time we bit the bullet and removed the Fed’s independence, -- that is if we still think democracy is more important than the market. It’s time to clip the wings of an eagle soaring down a path along which we do not wish to go.

For our other reports on the Federal Reserve go to:

The Enron Way: A Creation of the Federal Reserve

Financial Deregulation--Promoting Discrimination and the Rise of Fringe Banking



See ‘The Japanese Paradigm’ for a more detailed analysis of the policy decisions that put the USA in its current financial predicament: http://www.jubileeamendment.org/jp4.html



Click here to go to the Table of Contents.

What we demand of the FED?

  • That it be stripped of its independence and made accountable.
  • The setting of policy be separated from supervision.
  • That every effort be made to have the Fed set policy with the best interests of all Americans in mind--New Guidelines and mandates should be established.
  • The fed Chairman should be an elected or cabinet post
  • No more bailouts!


We ask those of you who take up the banner of deposing Chairman Greenspan maintain the highest degree of civility and courtesy. No violence, no profanity or anything illegal or of questionable taste. It is imperative that we maintain the highest degreee of integrity. We are faced with a human being many say is the most powerful man in the world and others practically worship. We do not want powerful corporate interests and their spin doctors twisting and distorting the truth of our words to their advantage. We don’t want an ill thought out action on our part to provides reasons to question the credibility of our positions. Our arguments and rationale are powerful. We must not let them become diluted or invalidated by reckless rhetoric and irresponsible behavior.

To those of faith, we ask you to walk an even harder path and find compassion for a human being who in many ways has fostered many of the evils you see in the world.

WE WILL BE GHOSTING THE NEXT FOMC MEETING May 4th.

Locations:

New York Federal Reserve, 33 Liberty Street, New York City

Time : 1:00 PM EST

Other Cities: Please check back

FOMC Meetings in 2004
June 29, 30th
August 10th
September 21st
November 10th
December 14th

There are Fed offices in Dallas, San Francisco, Atlanta, Boston, Washington, Phiadelphia, Minneapolis, Chicago, St. Louis, Cleveland, Kansas City, Richmond. If you live in another Fed location, we suggest you file with appropriate city officials there and hold a simultaneous protest. If you do not live in a city that has a Fed, file to protest one of your local brokerage offices.

If you are interested in getting more involved or setting up a protest in another city please click here.