Monday, July 20, 2009

Spare the Regs, Spoil the Bank

Record profits at Goldman Sachs while unemployment climbs is yet more proof that the pretend economy of Wall Street succeeds at the direct expense of the real economy of Main Street.

But this time it's worse, because Main Street is not just suffering while the bankers party, and Main Street is not just indirectly subsidizing Goldman through investors. Main Street is taking Goldman's windfall profits directly in the throat because the federal government has kindly transferred all Wall Street's risk to us taxpayers.

Paul Krugman explains that the failure to attach strong regulation to the Wall Street bailout makes an even bigger recession more likely.

The American economy remains in dire straits, with one worker in six unemployed or underemployed. Yet Goldman Sachs just reported record quarterly profits — and it’s preparing to hand out huge bonuses, comparable to what it was paying before the crisis. What does this contrast tell us?

First, it tells us that Goldman is very good at what it does. Unfortunately, what it does is bad for America.

Second, it shows that Wall Street’s bad habits — above all, the system of compensation that helped cause the financial crisis — have not gone away.

Third, it shows that by rescuing the financial system without reforming it, Washington has done nothing to protect us from a new crisis, and, in fact, has made another crisis more likely.

SNIP

Now the last time there was a comparable expansion of the financial safety net, the creation of federal deposit insurance in the 1930s, it was accompanied by much tighter regulation, to ensure that banks didn’t abuse their privileges. This time, new regulations are still in the drawing-board stage — and the finance lobby is already fighting against even the most basic protections for consumers.

If these lobbying efforts succeed, we’ll have set the stage for an even bigger financial disaster a few years down the road. The next crisis could look something like the savings-and-loan mess of the 1980s, in which deregulated banks gambled with, or in some cases stole, taxpayers’ money — except that it would involve the financial industry as a whole.

The bottom line is that Goldman’s blowout quarter is good news for Goldman and the people who work there. It’s good news for financial superstars in general, whose paychecks are rapidly climbing back to precrisis levels. But it’s bad news for almost everyone else.


Read the whole thing.

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