How do you replace 70% of GDP?

President Obama spoke on the economy yesterday morning, and Helicopter Ben delivered a speech on “Four Questions about the Financial Crisis” yesterday afternoon.

CNNMoney.com reports that in the prepared remarks for his speech, Bernanke said, “Recently we have seen tentative signs that the sharp decline in economic activity may be slowing.”

The ‘signs’ he is referring to include recent upticks in home sales and new home constructions, as well as improvements in consumer spending, especially new vehicles.

“A leveling out of economic activity is the first step toward recovery,” said Big Ben. “To be sure, we will not have a sustainable recovery without a stabilization of our financial system and credit markets.”

Bernanke may have wanted to wait until the retail numbers were released before preparing those remarks. Nearly every expert that has been surveyed on this topic believed that U.S. retail sales, which count for half of consumer spending, rose in March, mainly due to the auto industry incentives that began last month.

However, it turns out that retail numbers pulled a fast one – and showed a drop in sales for last month.

Two months of gains has boosted hopes that March’s numbers would follow suit, building a rebound in consumer spending.

But, not so much. The Commerce Department showed that March’s retail sales were down for almost every type of store except necessities, such as food and drugs.

MarketWatch reports: “Retail sales in the first quarter were down 1.2%, compared with the fourth quarter of last year, raising the possibility that real consumer spending may have fallen again for the first three months of 2009 after plunging at a 4% annual rate in the final six months of 2008.

“Economist David Rosenberg of Bank of America’s Merrill Lynch said he expected consumer spending to decline at a 3.7% annual pace in the April through June quarter.”

“The retail sales figures indicated incentives and promotions by car dealers and clothing stores such as Gap Inc. failed to draw customers hurt by a lack of credit and the highest jobless rate in 25 years.”

In other words…outlook not so good for the economy. Americans have clearly been spooked by the high jobless rate. It seems that everyone knows someone who has been laid off, or had hours cut back…and the possibility of it happening to you becomes very real. So you cut back. You make dinner instead of going out…make do with last year’s summer clothes instead of going on a shopping spree.

 

The United States treasury’s plan to deal with “toxic assets” relies on the very financial institutions that created the economic whirlwind. The young presidency is already in a vice, says Godfrey Hodgson.

President Barack Obama joked in his press conference on 24 March 2009 that the euphoria of his inauguration two months earlier had lasted only a single day. The hope he had the audacity to proclaim is not yet dead. But – even as he prepares to leave for a trip to Europe that will encompass the G20 summit in London (2 April), the Nato anniversary summit jointly hosted by France and Germany (3-4 April), and visits to the Czech Republic (4-5 April) and Turkey (6-7 April) – the future prospects of his presidency are already in the balance.

Among openDemocracy’s articles on the economic crisis:

Willem Buiter, “The end of American capitalism (as we knew it)” (17 September 2008)

Ann Pettifor, “The week that changed everything” (22 September 2008)

Will Hutton, “Wanted: a fairer capitalism” (6 October 2008)

Avinash Persaud, “Europe’s financial crisis: the integration lesson” (7 October 2008)

Paul Rogers, “A world in flux: crisis to agency” (16 October 2008)

Andre Wilkens, “The global financial crisis: opportunities for change” (10 November 2008)

Simon Maxwell & Dirk Messner, “A new global order: Bretton Woods II…and San Francisco II” (11 November 2008)

Larry Elliott, “From G8 to G20: the end of exclusion” (16 November 2008)

Krzysztof Rybinski, “A new world order” (4 December 2008)

Paul Rogers, “A world in revolt” (12 February 2009)

Katinka Barysch, “The real G20 agenda: from technics to politics” (16 March 2009)

Krzysztof Rybinski, “There is no zombie free lunch” (18 March 2009)

Sue Branford, “The G20′s missing voice” (26 March 2009)

Will Hutton, “A G20 deal: power bends to protest” (29 March 2009)

With great courage, Obama has insisted that he would stick to his promises to tackle long-term failings in American society, even as he struggled to heal the economic crisis. He continues to press for these reforms – in climate-change policy, healthcare, public education, dependence on imported oil, and growing inequality – even as he grapples with the blocking of credit and the terrible unemployment that is one of its consequences.

The week of 23-29 March saw a new twist: the emergence of a deadly dilemma that the president has to resolve. He has learned that he cannot unblock credit without going a long way to appease the interests of the bankers who caused the problem in the first place. At the same time he has become aware of the rising fury among everyday Americans triggered by the huge bonuses paid to executives at AIG, the giant insurance company that in 2008 posted the biggest losses in American business history.

Everyone agrees that the knot that has to be cut is the astronomical quantity of “toxic assets” poisoning the balance sheets of American banks – as well as those European banks (the Royal Bank of Scotland, Paribas, Deutsche Bank and UBS among them), which thought it was clever to copycat every Wall Street fashion.

The plan unveiled by Obama’s treasury secretary Timothy Geithner on 23 March hands to the banks the juiciest of “sweetheart” deals to persuade them to buy up what Geithner calls “legacy assets” (the financial crisis has given free rein to American public life’s culture of euphemism).

The president’s vice

Geithner’s plan distinguishes between securities based on truly valueless loans and those whose value has simply been depressed by the economic downturn. It proposes that the treasury and “private investors” – which in practice can only mean the investment banks, commercial banks and hedge-funds which created and invested in the toxic assets in the first place – will buy equal amounts of the unsaleable assets. But private investors will only be able to do so thanks to a far larger injection of money to be lent by a government agency, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).

Altogether it is calculated that private investors will contribute 6% or 7% of the money to clean up the banks’ balance-sheets. The taxpayer, in the shape of the treasury and FDIC, will put up more than 90%. That, in the good old days before Wall Street collapsed, used to be called “leverage” of perhaps thirteen-to-one. With government standing behind them to that extent, why wouldn’t the banks buy trash at prices kited with government money?

Timothy Geithner makes much of the importance of keeping the rescue in the private sector, which it patently is not. He also speaks warmly of the professional skills that will be devoted to the task by the very speculators who brought the economy to its knees.

The liberal economic intelligentsia don’t like it. Jeffrey Sachs calls it a “massive transfer of wealth from taxpayers to bank shareholders”. In a deadly back-of-the-envelope calculation he estimates that the plan will hand $276 billion – even today a not inconsiderable sum – directly from the taxpayers to bank shareholders (see Jeffrey Sachs, “Will Geithner and Summers Succeed in Raiding the FDIC and Fed?“, VoxEU, 25 March 2009).

The Nobel laureate and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman dismisses the plan as not much more than a revival of the George W Bush administration’s plan to absorb the banks’ toxic assets: just more “cash for trash”. The economist and former labour secretary, Robert Reich, and the Columbia University scholar Joseph Stiglitz are equally acerbic (see Edward Luce, “America’s liberals lay into Obama“, Financial Times, 27 March 2009).

The co-editor of The American Prospect and respected commentator, Robert Kuttner, says the Obama administration has chosen “the most expensive and risky way of trying to recapitalise the banks, and the least likely to succeed”. Kuttner also identifies a point that is likely to be the target of much angry criticism, namely that the president has turned to “the same Wall Street crew” who failed to handle the situation under the Bush administration, and indeed who were largely responsible for what went wrong in the first place: Robert Rubin, Laurence Summers, and their protégés (see Robert Kuttner, “Geithner’s last stand“, Huffington Post, 22 March 2009).

If anyone had any doubts about who would benefit from the Geithner “public-private partnership”, they had only to watch how the stock market responded. Bank shares overall rose by 10% in the aftermath, but the biggest banks that have survived did better than that. Citigroup was up 19%; Bank of America shot up 26% in heavy trading; Wells Fargo’s shares rose by 24%, and J.P. Morgan Chase‘s by 25%.  A day later, however, the wave of market enthusiasm had subsided.

The truth is that Obama now finds himself in a new vice. He feels he needs people from Wall Street to solve the street’s problems. That is one reason why it has taken him so long to fill the key jobs at the treasury under Geithner. At the same time he clearly underestimated the rage Main Street citizens feel both at the AIG bonuses and the broader proposition: that while they face losing their jobs and their homes because of the folly and greed of the financial sector, the only people who walk away laughing are the folks who caused the disaster in the first place.

No wonder that questions are being asked about the ubiquitous presence of present and former executives of Goldman Sachs in the Obama administration, just as in the ranks of its precedessor.

A time to choose

Barack Obama showed in his long campaign for the presidency that he is a very skilled politician. He is also by temperament cautious, even conservative. His instinct is to “reach across the aisle” in order to cure what he sees as the excessive partisanship of the years since the “Reagan revolution“. He is too a patient man. But now he understands that he has got to move fast if he is to save the hopes of his presidency (see “Barack Obama: don’t waste the crisis“, 6 February 2009).

In this the president is both beneficiary and victim of larger historic forces. The same event that cleared his way to the White House, the financial crisis symbolised by the fall of Lehman Brothers on 15 September 15 2008, may have made it impossible to govern; or at the least, may mean that he will have to sacrifice at least some of his hopes of long-term reform (see “The week that democracy won“, 29 September 2008).

In the short term, in order to heal the financial crisis it looks as though he has had to put the fate of his administration in the hands of the men from Wall Street.

Amid the stock-market panic of 1907, the financier JP Morgan was surprised that President Theodore Roosevelt didn’t “send your man to fix things up with my man”.  It couldn’t be done like that then, and it can’t be done now. But the young president and his even younger treasury secretary have nonetheless been taught a hard lesson in political economy.

To govern is to choose, as Aneurin Bevan – the Welsh architect of Britain’s post-1945 national healthcare system – said. It is now clear that inviting the poachers to act as gamekeepers was a mistake. Many Americans long accepted the conservative contention that government was the problem, not the solution. That phase of history seems to have ended, and a progressive president finds himself coping with a new wave of populism of a kind that seemed to have disappeared from America politics for generations. He means to govern, and he will have to choose.


Godfrey Hodgson was director of the Reuters’ Foundation Programme at Oxford University, and before that the Observer’s correspondent in the United States and foreign editor of the Independent. His books include The World Turned Right Side Up: a history of the conservative ascendancy in America (Houghton Mifflin, 1996); More Equal Than Others: America from Nixon to the New Century (Princeton University Press, 2006), and A Great and Godly Adventure: The Pilgrims and the Myth of the First Thanksgiving (PublicAffairs, 2007)

At Open Democracy:      http://www.opendemocracy.net/article/barack-obama-end-of-the-beginning

 

[ImperialBanker.jpg]

http://jessescrossroadscafe.blogspot.com/

 

A reassuring new story line is emanating from our leaders. I heard Representative Barney Frank, chair of the House Banking Committee, explain it. Then I read the same line in a Washington Post news story. That tells me people in high places are selling it. Dynamic capitalism, they explain, invents ways to create greater wealth, but sometimes it goes a little too far. Then government has to step in to correct things. This need typically occurs every generation or so, all in a day’s work. The Obama administration is proposing “sweeping” new regulatory laws so that capitalism can continue its good works.

The story makes disturbing current events sound practically normal. But what are the storytellers leaving out? They aren’t saying that this financial catastrophe was not merely an inevitable development of history but a man-made disaster. Greedheads on Wall Street did their part, but so did Washington. The reason we need new rules is that a generation of Democrats and Republicans systematically repealed or gutted the old ones–the regulatory controls enacted eighty years ago to remedy the last breakdown of capitalism (better known as the Great Depression).

The White House executed a nifty two-step this week to re-educate the public and deflect anger. On Tuesday Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner relaunched the massive bailout of banking and finance. Knowing how unpopular this is with the people at large, Geithner followed on Thursday with his “sweeping” plans to re-regulate the bankers and financiers. Whenever official plans are called “sweeping,” it indicates that they really, really mean it this time.

Most Americans are not financial experts. It’s very difficult, nearly impossible, for normal mortals to sort through the dense policy talk and conflicting opinions to figure out if the rhetoric of reform is real. Confusion is widespread in the land. Most Americans want to believe this president is leading us out of the swamp, but how can they know? I say, trust your gut feelings. They are as reliable as the learned experts.

Many Americans want to believe because they think that returning to “normal” means their decimated 401(k) accounts might somehow recover the 30-40 percent that disappeared during the past year. If it takes monster bank bailouts to restore stock-market prices, let’s have bailouts. Good luck with that. The Dow has regained 21 percent in two weeks of rallies, but I remind friends that steep, short bursts in the stock market do not foretell the future of the economy. Banks may be relieved of their losses without changing the general economic outlook. After the crash of 1929, there were occasional stock rallies, followed by fierce bears. It took twenty-five years (until 1954) for the Dow to regain its old peak. Another way to assess the Obama plan for reform is ask: who likes it? The verdict was swift and sure after Geithner’s twin announcements. Wall Street likes it. The blueprint for regulatory reforms was applauded by the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association; the American Insurance Association; and the Private Equity Council, the trade group for the major private funds that will get public money and backup insurance to buy the banking system’s rotten assets. This could be born-again patriotism. Or it could be the animal appetites of financiers smelling gorgeous opportunity for returns.

/http://www.thenation.com/doc/20090413/greider

© 2012 New Jersey CFO Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha