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Bank Bailouts

Thursday, Jun 18, 2009 5:19 PM UTC2009-06-18T17:19:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Does Obama’s plan for Wall Street measure up?

Take a wild guess

In a word: No.

The plan doesn’t stop bankers from making huge, risky bets with other people’s money. It does increase capital requirements and oversight, but it doesn’t require bankers to take their pay in long-term stock options or warrants, and it doesn’t even hint that banks should go back to being partnerships instead of publicly held corporations. All this means traders still have incentive to place big and often wildly risky bets as long as the potential winnings are big enough, and top executives have very little incentive to monitor what traders are up to as long as the traders are collecting large commissions on the bets.

Nor does the plan do anything to prevent banks from becoming too big to fail. It doesn’t hint at a return to the days before the late 1990s when commercial banks were separate entities from investment banks — before mammoth bank supermarkets like Citigroup came to be so tied up with so many other commercial and investment vehicles that they couldn’t be allowed to go under. And there’s not the slightest mention of antitrust law.

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Robert Reich, a professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley, was secretary of labor during the Clinton administration. He is also a blogger and the author of "Aftershock: The Next Economy and America's Future."  More Robert Reich

Monday, Jan 9, 2012 1:30 PM UTC2012-01-09T13:30:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Top Obama campaign aide lobbied for bank bailout

Senior campaign advisor Broderick Johnson was paid over $1 million to lobby for Wall St. over the past five years

Barack Obama and Broderick Johnson

Barack Obama and Broderick Johnson (Credit: AP)

The Obama campaign is keeping mum on the role senior advisor Broderick Johnson played in lobbying for the 2008 Wall Street bailout when he worked as a hired gun for the country’s largest financial services companies.

Johnson’s past work as a lobbyist was noted in the press when he was appointed a top Obama surrogate in late October, but not the details of his extensive and lucrative work for the financial services industry. Johnson’s hiring despite his recent work for Wall Street strikes a dissonant note in view of the Obama camp’s reported strategy of “channeling anti-Wall Street anger” as a way to take on the Republicans.

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Justin Elliott

Justin Elliott is a Salon reporter. Reach him by email at jelliott@salon.com and follow him on Twitter @ElliottJustin  More Justin Elliott

Wednesday, Nov 9, 2011 12:00 PM UTC2011-11-09T12:00:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

How the rich rig the system

From low capital gains taxes to stock buy-backs, here are the ways the elites ensure the markets benefit them

Too rigged to fail: how the system is stacked

 (Credit: Lynne Furrer via Shutterstock)

A growing number of Americans suspect that the American economic system is rigged in favor of the rich and merely affluent. That growing number of Americans is right.

Here are three of the many ways that markets for compensation are rigged to benefit not only the top 1 percent but also the top 10 percent, a group that includes many well-paid professionals:

Financial sector compensation. By now the phrase “too big to fail” has become so familiar that it is known by its acronym: TBTF. What needs to be emphasized is that TBTF is the basis for the huge bonuses paid to elite American bankers who benefit from a government that socializes their losses while allowing them to keep their profits.

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Michael Lind’s new book, "Land of Promise: An Economic History of the United States", will be published in April and can be pre-ordered at Amazon.com.   More Michael Lind

Thursday, Nov 3, 2011 12:00 AM UTC2011-11-03T00:00:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Occupy HQ: A bailed-out bank

In an ironic twist, a plaza in a Deutsche Bank skyscraper on Wall St. has become a key meeting place for protesters

An Occupy working group meets at 60 Wall Street.

An Occupy working group meets at 60 Wall Street.  (Credit: Justin Elliott)

Occupy Wall Street’s de facto headquarters is the atrium of a skyscraper that is home to a large bailed-out bank.

Various Occupy working groups, the key decision-making bodies of the movement, gather several times a day at 60 Wall Street, the North American headquarters of Deutsche Bank. Lined with palm trees and waterfalls, with direct access to shops and the subway, and — crucially — heated, the atrium is a respite from the raw, chaotic environs of Zuccotti Park.

The fact that Deutsche received bailout money — which was news to several occupiers I interviewed at 60 Wall Street — imbues the space with an ironic symbolism. A movement taking on global finance is now literally being run out of the ground floor of one of the industry’s biggest players.

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Justin Elliott

Justin Elliott is a Salon reporter. Reach him by email at jelliott@salon.com and follow him on Twitter @ElliottJustin  More Justin Elliott

Wednesday, Nov 2, 2011 12:45 PM UTC2011-11-02T12:45:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

A declaration of independence — from Wall Street

Washington can't -- or won't -- fix the economy. So we're going to have to do it ourselves

Wall street

 (Credit: iStockphoto)

After three years of political nonsense, we can hold one truth to be self-evident about our government. It is broken.

A financial crisis that should have inspired a grand new set of rules for Wall Street instead delivered a hopelessly compromised reform package — and even that weak sauce is under daily withering assault from the banking industry. The devastating aftermath of a Great Recession that should have demanded unrelenting executive action instead degenerated into a fruitless squabble between two parties competing to see who could best cut and cripple government.

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Andrew Leonard

Andrew Leonard is a staff writer at Salon. On Twitter, @koxinga21.  More Andrew Leonard

Wednesday, Oct 5, 2011 11:45 AM UTC2011-10-05T11:45:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

A proposed demand for Occupy Wall Street

Let's tackle the debt that actually matters

VIDEO
Occupy Wall Street Manifesto

 (Credit: iStockphoto/kryczka/Salon)

The establishment press’s primary “problem” with the Occupy Wall Street protest is that those silly kids don’t have a concrete demand. Or they have too many demands. Or their demands aren’t realistic.

This is silly. The movement’s “demand” is economic justice. Its goal is plainly to remind everyone that the bloated, obscenely profitable financial industry is sitting on vast piles of money while everyone else struggles, and to focus outrage about that situation where it belongs. Groups aligned either directly or in spirit with Occupy Wall Street have spent years issuing tons of demands (a financial transaction tax!) that the elites dismiss as unreasonable and the objective press ignores as unrealistic.

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Alex Pareene

Alex Pareene writes about politics for Salon. Email him at apareene@salon.com and follow him on Twitter @pareene  More Alex Pareene

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