Taibbi: "Why the Banks Should Be Broken Up"

FYI, this diary has also been crossposted over at Daily Kos: http://www.dailykos.com/stories/2016/4/9/1513067/-Taibbi-Why-the-Banks-S...

I wrote a diary late last year about the financial crisis of 2008: [Daily Kos] An understandable explanation for the stock market crash (that Dems are not supposed to talk about) (352 rec's)

The stock market crash of 2008 basically ruined my life (think "eat cat food in old age"), and I've been driven to understand why it happened, do you know what I mean? It’s actually taken me a few years to figure out WTF was even happening to me. I once was a highly skilled software engineer (Java, databases, yada yada), who decided to take a personally financed sabbatical because things were going so swell. And then the stock market crashed! Woo-hoo! It was great.

I left out a part about leaving my company: I was burned out from work and also from worrying about multiple rounds of layoffs. I thought I had been given a golden ticket to start a new chapter in my life, and decided to “trust the universe”. Little did I know that the universe was in a bit of a prankish mood, lol.

Quick Summary: the economic meltdown was not the fault of evil poor people who had been taking out mortgages that they could not afford. No, the meltdown was caused by a financial industry that was creatively coming up with a great new way FOR THEM to make money. One of their great ideas was to invent something called the “No Income No Asset” loan, or NINA. TAL’s Alex Blumberg says: “People in the industry called it a liar's loan. They expected people to lie.” Think about that for a minute. Then think about it again.

So it was lovely for me to see that the awesome Matt Taibbi has just come out with a new article in Rolling Stone: Why the Banks Should Be Broken Up

Paul Krugman wrote an op-ed in the New York Times today called "Sanders Over the Edge." He's been doing a lot of shovel work for the Hillary Clinton campaign lately, which is his right of course. The piece eventually devolves into a criticism of the character of Bernie Sanders, but it's his take on the causes of the '08 crash that really raises an eyebrow.

By way of making a criticism of the oft-repeated Sanders charge that the big banks need to be broken up, Krugman argues that banks were not "at the heart of the crisis."

This is Krugman's assessment of who was responsible:

"Predatory lending was largely carried out by smaller, non-Wall Street institutions like Countrywide Financial; the crisis itself was centered not on big banks but on 'shadow banks' like Lehman Brothers that weren't necessarily that big."

Forget about the Sanders-Clinton race, because it's irrelevant to the issue. Krugman is just wrong about this.

Let me make an analogy to make things more clear, using language that anyone who watches crime drama on TV should recognize. When it comes to selling drugs, we know of two key roles, right? The “small-fry” dealer who sells the stuff to the kids in the neighborhood, and the “king-pin” who makes the real money. The dealer is the most obvious “bad guy”, right?, he is easy to spot. But who do the cops always want to go after? The king-pin. The cops know it is actually the king-pin who is most responsible for the problem. Taking out a dealer is flashy and feels good, but in very little time the king-pin will simply find another one to put out on the street.

Krugman is essentially making the argument that the “small-fry” dealers bear most of the blame for 2008. And the language of “shadow banking’ has been introduced to muddy the waters, because who the fuck even knows what those words mean? But Taibbi points out that the king-pins absolutely played a CRITICAL ROLE in the financial crisis.

Those loans in turn were bought up by giant financial companies on Wall Street, who chopped them up into a kind of mortgage hamburger. Out of this hamburger, they made securities. These securities were then sold to institutional investors like pension funds, unions, insurance companies and hedge funds.

And in that little paragraph lies the proof that Glass-Steagall absolutely did play a huge fucking role in the crisis. Once upon a time (from 1933 to 1999, actually) there was a wall of separation between boring old commercial banking (such as mortgages) and the more lucrative and exciting investment business. The nature of the game being played in 2008 was to take boring old mortgages and “chop[] them up into a kind of mortgage hamburger” [OMG, that phrase is so perfect] and sold as investments. Glass-Steagall’s pesky old wall would have prevented that; without this slicing and dicing and repackaging, there would not have been any “product” to sell to investors or motivation to sell loans to those who were not financially able to pay them.

As it turns out there was a huge demand for ‘risk’ because return-crazed investors were so focused on ROI that they had forgotten what the word risk even meant. The banks were motivated to meet that demand, as all good capitalists are "inspired" to do. They met demand by creating products like liar’s loans, which they were willing to grant to anyone who had a pulse. Why? Because everyone involved in the scheme made money regardless of the mortgagee’s ability to pay: the small-fry dealers made money when they sold their loan “product” to unwitting folks who had the audacity to want the American dream; the big banks made money by selling “hamburger” to innocents who didn’t comprehend they were actually buying horse-meat. The horse-meat was fraudulently packaged with pretty labels that had AAA ratings from respected ratings agencies, and so the investors were duped. Capiche?

Krugman should watch a little more CSI. Any fool knows that going after the small-fry doesn’t solve squat — you have to bring down the king-pins. And that's exactly what Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren are trying to do.

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RantingRooster's picture

people still listen to Krugman. The report from the Financial Crisis Investigative Committee completely eviscerates almost anything and everything Krugman has been sprouting for the past 10 years. The Federal Reserve has had the legislative tools in place since 94' to prevent the financial crisis of 07-08 but never lifted a finger to do anything about it. I'm still going through the report but dam, there are a lot of "regulators", imho, that should be in jail. Not to mention most of the CEO's of Wall Street should be sharing a cell with them. And a number of elected officials too.

It's truly sickening to read.

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C99, my refuge from an insane world. #ForceTheVote

national economics columnist who was not al gaga over Friedman, Laffer and Geenspan.

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Euterpe2

I was a pretty damn devoted reader of Krugman for 6-7 years, both his column and his blog. Recommended him to dozens of people. And then the hatchetwork on Sen. Sanders began.

Haven't read either his column or his blog in months, and never will again. If you're being relied upon to translate complex theories into layman's terms, trust is not a commodity to be traded away lightly.

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"The real power is in the hands of small groups of people and I don't think they have titles. -- Bob Dylan"

Older and Wiser Now's picture

But I'm sure you already know that Smile I love your avatar, btw. Wear that bojo with pride!

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~OaWN

TYT nails it again.

"Yesterday we covered the NY Daily News’s attempted hatchet job on Bernie Sanders. Why all the hate? It may have something to do with the fact that the paper’s owner [Mort Zuckerman] would stand to lose about a $100 billion a year in taxes if Bernie’s tax plan got through. Cenk Uygur, host of The Young Turks, breaks it down."

Zuckerman is a big Clinton loyalist, which is never disclosed in Daily News reporting.

Clinton Foundation donors include dozens of media organizations, individuals

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"We've done the impossible, and that makes us mighty."

Older and Wiser Now's picture

Thank you so much for this video. I've cross-posted this diary over to that other place, and have updated it to include this video clip. Awsome-possum. I heart Cenk.

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~OaWN

Pat K California's picture

I've spent most of this morning reading blistering replies to that Krugman column in question. One of the best was posted at Naked Capitalism this morning: Paul Krugman Crosses the Line, by Gerald Epstein, "Professor of Economics and a founding Co-Director of the Political Economy Research Institute (PERI) at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst." This is just the first paragraph:

In his recent New York Times opinion column, “Sanders Over the Edge” (4/8/16), economist Paul Krugman offers his readers a basketful of misinformation on important economic matters about which he should – and probably does – know better. The column contains a large number of snipes and a great deal of innuendo against Bernie Sanders and his supporters, but here I focus on his claims about “Too Big To Fail” (TBTF) banks, their role – non-role, according to Krugman – in the financial crisis, and Sanders’ understanding of the policy tools available to deal with them. Krugman’s claims about these issues are misleading, almost certainly wrong, and, in my view, call into question the credibility of his New York Times column as a source of economic information and analysis.

Then, when I scrolled down to read the comments, I found this link to ANOTHER Cenk Uygur YouTube vid that specifically deals with the Krugman column in question.

Yeah ... it's been an interesting morning! Tons of good stuff to soak up. Caught the Matt Taibbi article, too ... excellent as always.

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"Long term: first the rich get mean, then the poor get mean, and the rest is history." My brother Rob.