Economists: Another Financial Crisis on the Way (Full Version)

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Brain -> Economists: Another Financial Crisis on the Way (3/4/2010 7:19:34 PM)

I know what will solve this problem because it fixes everything, tax cuts!


Economists: Another Financial Crisis on the Way

Nonpartisan Group Led by Nobel Winner Calls for Stronger Financial Reforms
By MATTHEW JAFFE
March 2, 2010 —


Even as many Americans still struggle to recover from the country's worst economic downturn since the Great Depression, another crisis  one that will be even worse than the current one  is looming, according to a new report from a group of leading economists, financiers, and former federal regulators.

In the report, the panel, which includes Rob Johnson of the United Nations Commission of Experts on Finance and bailout watchdog Elizabeth Warren, warns that financial regulatory reform measures proposed by the Obama administration and Congress must be beefed up to prevent banks from continuing to engage in high-risk investing that precipitated the near-collapse of the U.S. economy in 2008.

The report warns that the country is now immersed in a "doomsday cycle" wherein banks use borrowed money to take massive risks in an attempt to pay big dividends to shareholders and big bonuses to management  and when the risks go wrong, the banks receive taxpayer bailouts from the government.

"Risk-taking at banks," the report cautions, "will soon be larger than ever."

Without more stringent reforms, "another crisis  a bigger crisis that weakens both our financial sector and our larger economy  is more than predictable, it is inevitable," Johnson says in the report, commissioned by the nonpartisan Roosevelt Institute.

The institute's chief economist, Nobel Prize-winner Joseph Stiglitz, calls the report "an important point of departure for a debate on where we are on the road to regulatory reform."

The report blasts some of Washington's key players. Johnson writes, "Our government leaders have shown little capacity to fix the flaws in our market system." Two other panelists, Simon Johnson, a professor at MIT, and Peter Boone of the Centre for Economic Performance, voiced similar criticisms.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner "oversaw policy as the bubble was inflating," write Johnson and Boone, and "these same men are now designing our 'rescue.'"

The study says that "In 2008-09, we came remarkably close to another Great Depression. Next time we may not be so 'lucky.' The threat of the doomsday cycle remains strong and growing," they say. "What will happen when the next shock hits? We may be nearing the stage where the answer will be  just as it was in the Great Depression  a calamitous global collapse."


The panelists call for major banks to maintain liquid capital of at least 15 to 25 percent of their assets, the enactment of stiffer consequences for executives of bailout recipients and for government officials to start breaking up firms that grow too big.

In the report, Elizabeth Warren, who was chair of the Congressional Oversight Panel, reiterates her calls for an independent agency to protect consumers from abusive Wall Street practices.

"While manufacturers have developed iPods and flat-screen televisions, the financial industry has perfected the art of offering mortgages, credit cards and check overdrafts laden with hidden terms that obscure price and risk," Warren writes. "Good products are mixed with dangerous products, and consumers are left on their own to try to sort out which is which. The consequences can be disastrous."

Frank Partnoy, a panelist from the University of San Diego, claims that "the balance sheets of most Wall Street banks are fiction." Another panelist, Raj Date of the Cambridge Winter Center for Financial Institutions Policy, argues that government-backed mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have become "needlessly complex and irretrievably flawed" and should be eliminated. The report also calls for greater competition among credit rating agencies and increased regulation of the derivatives market, including requiring that credit-default swaps be traded on regulated exchanges.

With the Senate Banking Committee, led by Chris Dodd, D-Conn., poised to unveil its financial regulatory reform proposal sometime in the next week, the report calls on Congress to enact reforms strong enough to prevent another meltdown.

"Sen. Dick Durbin once said the banks 'owned' the Senate," says Johnson. "The next few weeks will determine whether or not that statement is true."

In response to the report, a spokesman for the Treasury Department told ABC News that the administration's regulatory reform proposals would be the most significant Wall Street overhaul in generations.

"We laid out our strong principles of reform last June and we have been fighting every day since to see them enacted in law," said Treasury spokesman Andrew Williams. "While we have a tough fight ahead, we are getting close to seeing Congress pass the most significant overhaul of the financial sector in our lifetimes."
http://abcnews.go.com/Business/economists-warn-financial-us-economy/story?id=9990828




Real0ne -> RE: Economists: Another Financial Crisis on the Way (3/4/2010 7:27:12 PM)

yeh they fucking took bank notes made copies and sold them to china.




popeye1250 -> RE: Economists: Another Financial Crisis on the Way (3/5/2010 1:16:37 AM)

Fuck the banks!
The Congress needs to just walk away. Let the bad ones go into bankruptcy like they're supposed to and solvent and new banks will fill the void.
Why do we even bother to have bankruptcy laws in this country anymore?




DCWoody -> RE: Economists: Another Financial Crisis on the Way (3/5/2010 1:43:31 AM)

The problem with that Popeye, is people rely on banks. What dya think would happen if 5% of the population customers with bank T, suddenly had all their savings, current accounts, etc....just disappear....no matter how much they'd saved, their entire fortune is now whatever cash they have in their pockets.
Chaos, rioting, bank runs on every bank, which none of them are ready for.




mefisto69 -> RE: Economists: Another Financial Crisis on the Way (3/5/2010 4:03:35 AM)

it's not the brick building... it's the scum bags in the board rooms. i wouldn't convict anyone that took out a board of directors. now the bastards are betting against small countries NOT getting financing to help solve shaky economies.




DarkSteven -> RE: Economists: Another Financial Crisis on the Way (3/5/2010 5:30:40 AM)

There are two banks.

There are the ones that make loans to people.  And there are the ones that make huge risky bets.  The first types are the types we were told would be getting a bailout, and the second are the ones that got the money.

I'm not sure about propping up the first type, but screw the second.




LadyEllen -> RE: Economists: Another Financial Crisis on the Way (3/5/2010 5:42:18 AM)

The part I dont understand is that we all know it went tits up because of the relaxation of regulations that were inspired by the previous instances when unregulated banks fucked up the world, but that the replacement of those regulations is not seen as the single most important step towards putting things right and preventing another episode. Rather it is recommended that business as usual be resumed, in full knowledge of the inherent dangers and in full knowledge that it is more probable than not that the disaster shall be repeated.

Scum sucking vermin. "Der ewige Banker" shall not be too far away if this continues and the disaster repeats.

E





pahunkboy -> RE: Economists: Another Financial Crisis on the Way (3/5/2010 6:49:26 AM)

there can be no 2nd crises - because the first one never was solved.




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