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Richard (RJ) Eskow

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"Bain Capitalism": Mitt's Frankenstein Is a Politically-Created Monster

Posted: 01/13/2012 9:32 pm

Bain Capital must seem like a Frankenstein's monster to Mitt Romney's campaign Like Mary Shelley's creature, it's stalking its creator just as he's about to claim the thing he loves most. But Bain Capital -- and Bain Capitalism -- isn't Mitt's creation. It was sewed together from the corpses of dead ideals and shocked into life in Washington's political laboratories.

Mitt's monster was created by a broken political process that's allowed politicians in both parties to create an artificial, destructive and exploitative form of pseudo-capitalism -- and often to get rich from it. Romney's campaign will probably survive, but the monster will go on destroying lives and dreams.

Conservatives and self-described "centrists" speak about "Bain Capitalism" -- aka "vulture capitalism" -- as if it were the inevitable result of immutable economic laws. But it's only been around for thirty years or so, after government policies in taxation and bank regulation made it possible. That's right: Government, not free enterprise, made Bain Capitalism.

And what government has made, government can un-make.

The "Bain Bailout"

They're calling it the "Bain Bailout" -- although Bain didn't receive any actual funds. But when a federal regulator took over a failing New England bank, it decided to "forgive" several million dollars for loans that Bain had received from the bank.

Why? Nobody's been asked to explain. But that decision reflects a long history of cozy relationships between regulators and the financiers who might one day pay them a hefty salary after they've left government service.

If the millions in 'forgiveness' were intended to make sure that jobs stayed in New England, it backfired. As we'll see, job creation is used a lot to justify government actions that make a few people rich without creating any jobs -- and often destroy them.

Money for Nothing

Bain and Company was a Boston-based management consulting firm, and in many ways one of the better ones, until CEO Bill Bain decided to create an investment firm and asked Mitt Romney to run it.

Management consultants make a good living, but they aren't usually able to stockpile the hundreds of millions it takes to become a serious investor. So where did Romney and his associates come up with the money to become serious players?

They didn't. They invested other people's money. Their venture didn't really take off until relaxed enforcement of banking regulations made it possible for them to get into "leveraged buyouts" -- investments of borrowed money -- in a big way. They moved aggressively into private equity - investments in privately-held corporations which aren't subject to disclosure rules and other requirements that publicly traded companies must meet.

Skin

Investment funds are typically expected to have some 'skin in the game' by putting up some of their own money, but in Bain's case that was almost always a sham. Dade International is a perfect example: Romney and associates 'invested' $30 million in Dade. But they also demanded $100 million in management fees from the company, which means their actual investment was negative $70 million.

The money that Romney & Co. borrowed doesn't go onto their books, either. It's charged against the companies they buy with it. In Dade's case, the company wound up saddled with $1.5 billion in debt -- plus Bain's $100 million management fee, of course -- and went bankrupt. Roughly 1,700 people lost their jobs -- but Bain walked away with $242 million in stock sales that Dade had 'borrowed' (under Romney's management) to pay.

Somebody got "skinned" in this deal, but it wasn't Romney. Bain did lose its remaining shares during the bankruptcy proceedings, however, after creditors accused Romney and his associates of "professional mismanagement" and "unjust enrichment."

Unjust Enrichment

Now there's a concept that's due for a comeback. "Unjust enrichment" is generally held to applylegally whenever someone got wealthy at the expense of others without compensating them, and without doing anything substantial to earn it. (One legal definition describes it as the acquisition of wealth or property "by chance, mistake, or without any personal effort.")

In the world of highly-leveraged investors like Bain Capital, unjust enrichment isn't jut a legal term. It's a way of life.

The enrichment process for players like Romney accelerated dramatically during the deregulation fervor of the go-go nineties. Romney and his ilk were allowed to borrow more and more money from third parties, use them to buy up companies, and skim the cream for themselves.

With the relaxation of Glass-Steagall enforcement, and ultimately its repeal altogether, banks were able to lend Bain-type investors millions of dollars of their customers' money, too. Some of the money that Bain borrowed to buy companies could have belonged to the workers who lost their jobs as a result. And when those over-leveraged banks finally collapsed, every taxpayer's money was used to rescue them.

How's that for "unjust enrichment"?

Tax Deduction Destruction

Why do you think Mitt Romney won't release his tax returns? This Fox Business article is almost certainly correct: because he has saved millions of dollars through the tax loophole known as "carried interest."

Income on investments is frequently taxed at 15%, instead of the higher rates paid by cops, firefighters, nurses, or anyone who works at a job to earn their income. Conservatives defend that break by saying that this encourages business investment and therefore creates jobs.

There's an obvious answer to that: You got your break; where are the jobs? But in the case of leveragers like Romney, here's the real irony: They get this enormous tax break even though they're not the ones investing the money. They're given a percentage of the fund's earnings, typically 20 percent, and get to collect their share of the fund's earnings at this lower rate. Even their management fee -- usually 2 percent of the total investment, or thereabouts - is taxed at the lower rate, although it's clearly a service fee and not investment income.

Conservatives love to sneer at deductions for solar panels or electric cars as 'tax expenditures,' implying they're just forms of government spending to advance policy goals. But the capital gains tax and related cuts are far greater 'expenditures,' and they're stated purpose is also to promote a policy goal -- more jobs.

Yet nothing in these tax breaks actually requires anyone to create job. That's why Romney & Co. were able to slash jobs as easily as they created them. They made money either way, and they were able to take advantage of this huge tax break either way.

That's not an accident of fate. That's the result of deliberate political decisions and acts of Congress.

Bain Capitalism vs. Capitalism

There's a reason why investors like Warren Buffett dislike private-equity sharks like Romney and Bain. Buffett recently told Time magazine that "I don't like what private-equity firms do in terms of taking out every dime they can and leveraging [companies] up so that they really aren't equipped, in some cases, for the future."

Progressives who cast Buffett as an Occupy-style reformer are likely to be disappointed. He's an old-school capitalist of the first order. (Although he did have a great line after Gingrich said that Occupy protesters should "get a job": "Maybe they can be historians for Freddie Mac too and make $600,000 a year."

Buffett doesn't oppose Bain Capital because he's a socialist. And with $45 billion to his name, he certainly doesn't 'envy' Mitt Romney, as Romney said of his critics the other day. Buffett loathes what Romney's Bain represents because he believes in real capitalism. Everybody I know who's worked with him says the same things: He does his research, he expects people to work hard, and he invests in companies so that they'll have long-term success.

If Not Mitt ...

The "Bain capitalists," on the other hand, are only worried about the next quarter's earnings, so they can suck the maximum amount of money out of the company and move on to their next leveraged buyout.

God didn't make the world that way, and neither did evolution. The Bain capitalists exists because we've allowed our politicians to create them.

If Mitt Romney had never been born, someone else would have done exactly what he did. And for all we know, somebody just like him might be the leading contender for the Republican nomination. Mitt Romney is the symptom, not the disease, and there are a lot of people waiting to take his place.

System of a Down

Newt Gingrich had it exactly right when he called it "crony capitalism." We're living under a government of the crony capitalists, by the crony capitalists, and for the crony capitalists.

But Gingrich was exactly wrong when he said that the problem lay solely with Romney's character. There are a lot of people with Romney's character defects. As long as Bain Capitalism exists, there will be Romneys and Bain Capitals to exploit it. Maybe that's why I don't condemn them personally as much as other people do. If your life's goal is to make money, then you'll exploit the system you're given.

In fact, Romney would have been fired if he had done anything else. The company was called "Bain Capital," not "Bain Employment." Say what you will about Mitt (and I'll probably agree), but the real problem lies much deeper than his character.

Monster Mash

The system is the real monster.

Bain Capital and its breed were created by government policies. To end them, we have to change the policies. But to change the policies we have to change the politicians. And to change the politicians, we have to change the political system.

Politicians created this monster, and politicians can send it back to the graveyard. Americans should demand no less.

 

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10:17 PM on 01/15/2012
Government didn't create them, lobbyists paid for by vulture capitalists ensured corrupt deregulating politicans got elected to further enable vulture capitalists ie to legalise those crimes they were already committing and allow their expansion.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NJP1
01:41 PM on 01/15/2012
capitalism is the system we all bought into, no point in complaining that some are better at it than others, and in consequence have made more money out of it than others. everyone wants capital, and uses capital, it's the system we're stuck with until the energy input (hyrocarbons) stops, when that happens our civilisation is bombed back to the stone age.
http://www.yourmedievalfuture.com/
12:01 AM on 01/15/2012
Thank you for the insightful essay. Bain capalism screams for the need of stronger government regulations.
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Beatriz09
11:31 PM on 01/14/2012
VERY interesting and informative article, as always. Thanks Richard.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
10:13 PM on 01/14/2012
Wow. what amazing denial.
Joel Smithis
Small business owner
06:24 PM on 01/14/2012
Thanks Rick for this piece!

Now we all understand why cons want to further weaken the government. Running against Socialism may be their slogan, but what they really want is to incapacitate to government and prevent it from doing anything to protect the middle class!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Arion
06:04 PM on 01/14/2012
It's a sign of the times that Wall Street has nothing left to invest in except corpses (a la Bain Capital) or stealing from orphans (a la securitized debt obligations). As an institution, Wall Street is bankrupt. Nonetheless, it continues to drain the blood from all of us. Wall Street is, quite simply, sucking the American economy to death.
05:56 PM on 01/14/2012
This is a superb political essay and a clear explanation why neither Mitt Romney nor any other Republican should be considered a legitimate candidate to lead this nation.
Joel Smithis
Small business owner
05:49 PM on 01/14/2012
The pressure of GOP establishment (fervent supporters of crony capitalism and Romney) is growing to stop Gingrich, Paul and Perry from attacking Romney.

Interesting revelations, aren't they?
Artu Di-tu
El valiente vive hasta que el cobarde quiere
05:18 PM on 01/14/2012
Mitt Romney aka SuperBain.

Get the $$ money $$ out of politics! Amend Citizens United.

OBAMA 2012
04:27 PM on 01/14/2012
"They're calling it the "Bain Bailout" -- although Bain didn't receive any actual funds. But when a federal regulator took over a failing New England bank, it decided to "forgive" several million dollars for loans that Bain had received from the bank."

"Why? Nobody's been asked to explain. But that decision reflects a long history of cozy relationships between regulators and the financiers who might one day pay them a hefty salary after they've left government service."

Nobody forgave my bills when my business closed due to the economy! But then I didn't personally have 1/4 of a billion dollars in my wallet.

Laissez Faire Right wing Capitalism impoverishes the citizens of countries. It directs rivers of money up to a very small group of people equaling 1% at it most dense distribution.

When the mafia busts out a business the FBI sets up wiretaps. When Romney, Bain and other Corporate Raiders bust out a business Senators receive contributions to approve or at least to look the other way.
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Katherine Schock
Over the hill,liberal,organic gardener
07:42 PM on 01/14/2012
Fanned for an exceptional post! The politicians over the past 30 years or so have been in the pocket of the corporations...both political parties!
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BigBearcatBill
This is the real Bearcat - a Binturong
02:49 PM on 01/14/2012
This race is the most educational that I can remember for getting us informed about the business machines running the country's economy, and apparently at times not running it for the benefit of the middle class and poor. We will learn about what I believe is the start of destruction of American cohesion and the unwritten contract between the rich citizens with the middle class and poor that they are going to play as a team and try to give everyone a chance at least as good as they got (remember the 1940s -1970s, greatest period of poor/middle class development in World's history). Thanks Mitt, if not for you coming back as the 2nd Ross Perot presidential candidate, we would not have exposed the deterioration of the backbone of the country as fast - that backbone you Vulture Capitalists want to pick clean and then grow back your way - no unions and no safety regulations!
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Merseysidefella
I read the news today oh, boy
04:44 PM on 01/14/2012
We are lucky to have Mitt Romney running, that way the Banana Republic crony capitalism that he represents is fully exposed.
Thanks Mitt!
100 years from now the term "Bain Capitalism" will be mentioned in the same sentence as "Banana Republic", the explosion of corruption during the Yeltsin years in Russia, serfdom in the Middle Ages, the Hoover economic philosophy, and the regimes of Robert Mugabe and the like.
Please lets try to get Bain Capitalism as part of the permanent national lexicon!
Joel Smithis
Small business owner
05:58 PM on 01/14/2012
Half of the poor American electorate will still protects crony capitalism, the same way poor white southerners were defending plantation owners for nothing during Civil War.
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BigBearcatBill
This is the real Bearcat - a Binturong
07:25 PM on 01/14/2012
The most important thing that can come of this is informing everyone that the USA no longer makes it's bread and butter out of producing physical goods like cars, appliances, electronics, clothes - These guys like Bain gave that all away to the cheapest bidders who are countries that don't allow unions, don't protect their workers and environment like modern countries do and treat their people as Expendable!! It is time for America to force its big business guys and financiers like Bain to quit abusing us and the whole world just so they can make a quicker Buck! My guess is they are planning to get their space transportation program going because they know we will kick them off the earth if they keep abusing every country's middle class and poor.
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laymancanuck
IGNORANCE has used up its quota of TOLERANCE
02:15 PM on 01/14/2012
The "Monster Mash" paragraph is the best description of the American political system, enmeshed with a predatory economic system I've ever encounter. Changing the politicians has little impact on actual policy. All the players in the game know they will be very well reward for just for playing, helping to maintain the status quo. It's the same in the economics intellectual community. The climate change deniers know the unspoken truth. Do your part to support the political/ economic system and you will be rewarded. Challenge the system and face endless struggle.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carl Caroli
I just don't understand people
01:56 PM on 01/14/2012
Politicians have a vested interest in maintaining the status quo. We can not count on them to right the wrongs willingly. Voting, unfortunately, does nothing since the incumbents run the show. So here we are, as a nation, in a stalemate with the uber-rich taking what they want, buying legislation that makes it easy, and then, to use the recent events as an analogy, pissing on the middle class.
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Merseysidefella
I read the news today oh, boy
01:35 PM on 01/14/2012
Let´s introduce the term "Bain capitalism" into the national lexicon !
PLEASE !!!
The right wing is always framing in creative ways, introducing euphemisms and new creative interpretations of history and reality.
To counter that, we have to start using words with precision to describe things : --"no, that´s not capitalism, that´s Bain capitalism" !
Citizen54
Conservatism is a con job!
02:37 PM on 01/14/2012
"Bain," as in sounds like "bane."