More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Robert Scheer

Robert Scheer

Posted: February 3, 2010 01:57 AM

Volcker Rules

What's Your Reaction:

Finally President Barack Obama has come to his senses on financial regulation. His endorsement of what he calls the "Volcker Rule" for once puts him squarely on the side of ordinary Americans as opposed to the banking bandits who have so thoroughly fleeced the public.

The proposal from former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker basically involves restoring the spirit, if not the letter, of the 1930s Glass-Steagall banking regulations to prevent another Great Depression. It means separating the activities of commercial banks, entrusted with the deposits of ordinary folks, from the antics of the financial high rollers who are presumably dealing with wealthier and more knowledgeable investors. Commercial banks were intended to be heavily regulated and insured by the government to protect the savings of unwary citizens. Less risk-averse investors and the firms that handled their funds could fend for themselves, and if there was a collapse there would be no innocent victims requiring a government bailout.

This setup worked splendidly for more than six decades, until the rules were changed to permit the merger of the two types of banking activity, which never would have happened had President Ronald Reagan renamed Volcker as head of the Fed back in 1987. To reappoint Volcker would have been the logical move given his spectacular record in taming inflation, which he brought down to 3.6 percent after it had risen to 11.3 percent thanks to the energy crisis of 1979. Reagan went with Alan Greenspan instead because of their shared ideological fervor for unfettered free markets. But the repeal of Glass-Steagall required bipartisan support, and that eventually came with the presidency of Bill Clinton, who reappointed Greenspan and his fellow free-market ideologues Robert Rubin and Lawrence Summers to head the Treasury Department. They joined forces with the Wall Street lobby, and as a result Glass-Steagall was repealed in 1999 when Clinton signed the law eliminating it.

Unfortunately, and despite the collapse of the banking system brought about by the shenanigans of the "too big to fail" conglomerates permitted in the new deregulatory environment, Obama has wasted the last year and trillions of taxpayer dollars bailing out Wall Street without putting significant new rules in place to govern reckless behavior. Only now, with the economic disaster bankrupting the government, has he turned to Volcker for leadership. And in testimony Tuesday before the Senate Banking Committee, Volcker offered the essential justification for needed banking legislation:

"The basic point is that there has been, and remains, a strong public interest in providing a `safety net'--in particular, deposit insurance and the provision of liquidity in emergencies--for commercial banks carrying out essential services. There is not, however, a similar rationale for public funds-taxpayer funds--protecting and supporting essentially proprietary and speculative activities."

Investment houses would still be permitted to play freely at the Wall Street casino, but they would have to pay the consequences of their own failure. In the event that the largest of them approached collapse, the government would still step in--not to save them but to dispose of the body in a way that did not endanger the health of others. As Volcker put it, when it would come to dealing with the impending collapse of an investment giant: "The mandate is to arrange an orderly liquidation or merger. In other words, euthanasia, not a rescue."

Euthanasia was applied to Lehman Brothers but not Goldman Sachs, which was allowed to suddenly jump over the wall to become a commercial bank and thus eligible for TARP funding and many billions more from the government.

The biggest banks, whether originally commercial or investment banks, are now screaming their predicted pain at the prospect of new regulations--and no wonder. An analysis of the five top banks affected, led by Goldman Sachs, shows they stand to lose $13 billion in revenue next year if the proposed regulations pass, according to Bloomberg. But there is hope for at least some bipartisan support for the restoration of a wall separating these two very different sorts of banking activities, as indicated by a bill co-sponsored by Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., to explicitly restore the safeguards of Glass-Steagall.

Please don't let your eyes glaze over on this issue as a matter of arcane economic regulation. It's the ballgame as far as breaking the death grip of Wall Street over our economy. The projected $1.6 trillion deficit is only the first installment on decades of crippling debt that will pile up because of the irresponsibility of a radically deregulated banking system. This should be the only reminder we need that little else matters in the way of public policy discussion as long as Wall Street bleeds us dry.

 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 10
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carolab
Walking an 87-year-old in the sand isn't easy
05:34 AM on 03/04/2010
It will do nothing to end too big to fail. All it will do is leave speculation "innovation" in place by smaller, "proprietary" financial institutions (and the Treasury/Fed will determine whether or not they are getting too big) while the commercial banks continue their implicit guarantees of government backing.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
The Power To Unelect
Corruption Is Destroying The Nation
10:06 PM on 02/03/2010
Robert...love you're writing.

You wrote that the "Volcker rule" would restore the spirit but not the letter of Glass-Steagall.

Problem is........."the letter" is the important part.......it's what made it work.

All we are going to get from the Obama admin is fake, flim flam regulations..... not real regulation.

Obama is totally 100% corporate controlled... he will not go against his corporate masters.
07:50 PM on 02/03/2010
It's just more talk and more flowery speeches. Nothing will happen. To find out what is really going on, listen to this interview with Professor Michael Hudson on KPFA, and then be afraid.

http://www.kpfa.org/archive/id/58336
iridium53
Semper Fi
05:04 PM on 02/03/2010
Your interpretation of Team Obama's intent is nonsense.

Volcker says one thing.
Obama says "like Glass-Steagall" which was about controlling speculation by prohibiting bank holding companies from owning other financial companies.
Two days later Geithner says it not about breaking up the banks.
Then, today, a Fed Governor, Warch, one of Bernankes's buds, goes for the scare tactic by saying that regulation would harm "the American Economy."

Team Obama, the gang that can't shoot straight, and the Democrats, have no discipline and no real intention of putting meaningful regulations on bankers. Like so many things Team Obama has done, this is all for show, a tale, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.

Somebody else in 2012. Somebody who can actually manage an administration. Somebody that will actually do something.
07:09 PM on 02/03/2010
If you think Geithner and Volcker at odds about breaking up banks, think again. The Volcker Rule may force commercial banks to shed some business units, but they will not have to shrink to do it; in fact, it's possible they will emerge larger than ever.

In the case of Bank of America and JP Morgan, which were just recently asked by the Federal Government to buy insolvent investment banks, it can be assumed they will get ample time and assistance in eliminating their investment-bank activities.
batguano
As Long As Grass Grow, Wind Blow & The Sky Is Blue
10:27 AM on 02/03/2010
Thanks Robert. You write:

"The proposal from former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker basically involves restoring the spirit, if not the letter, of the 1930s Glass-Steagall banking regulations"

The letter of G-S should be re-instated in full and if deemed necessary new regulations (added "spirit") to address the implications of the derivative and other unintelligible instruments and any other greed-driven scams by the banking thieves added to rein-in that parasitic greed.

There is a bill in the House sponsored by Cong. Maurice Hinchey, HR 4375, to re-instate G-S and another in the Senate; we should support those efforts (and others to expand real reform) as I believe there are serious efforts to water-down and emasculate any efforts to "reform" banking greed and excess. If the bankers don't want G-S re-instated, it must be a good move!

And while we're at it lets remove the anti-trust exemptions for the insurance industry and make them compete finally!
10:12 AM on 02/03/2010
If I as a private citizen want to gamble, so be it. However as a taxpayer, I'm angry that I was forced to give loans to gambling investment house/bank entities. Volcker must win out on this.....a seperation. And time for Dodd to show some reason and defend the middle-class and not butt-kiss the investment class that butters his bread. Time for common sense here and not to keep selling public policies to the highest bidder!!!!!
04:54 AM on 02/03/2010
Read what Robert Scheer wrote again:

"Please don't let your eyes glaze over on this issue as a matter of arcane economic regulation. It's the ballgame as far as breaking the death grip of Wall Street over our economy."

The crooks rely on us to get bored and look the other way. But it's important to understand how they pulled this massive scam off so they don't do it again.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
02:34 AM on 02/03/2010
Here here! Finally a voice of reason. Why have so many been so silent for so long? The problem is as obvious as the nose on your face, we all need to flood congress with correspondence demanding they get this done as soon as possible. All of these "bad actors" are right back to their old tricks.
05:53 AM on 02/03/2010
Sp8z: How about the 400 FAX's I sent demanding a stop to the madness last Fall? Funny, they got swept under the rug and the filthy, thieving banks and corporations reigned supreme. We need millions of strong advocates for the American people, like R. Scheer. Americans have been kicked to the curb for years now, while the CEO's have increased their wealth by billions. Americans need homes, jobs, health care, education, food (46% go to bed hungry), clothing and have been traveling on levels one and two of Maslow's Hierarchy of Human Needs. They will never reach the top, Self Actualization, if their only mission in life is to survive each day. We need a turn around, and fast.