With the world's attention focused on the debate
over the debt ceiling in the US, some rather startling
evidence released by the non-partisan Government Accountability
Office attached to the US Congress went relatively
unnoticed. That evidence indicated that the amounts
outlaid by the US Federal Reserve to deal with the
financial crisis of 2007-08 amounted to a whopping
$16 trillion, or well in excess of the US economy's
GDP of $14.5 trillion in 2010. The near crisis that
resulted from the debt ceiling debate was because
of the conditions that were being imposed to increase
the cap on public debt accumulated over years from
$14.3 trillion to $16.4 trillion. The Fed bail out
compares favourably even with these figures. It is
clear, therefore, that huge money was delivered to
the largest firms in the financial system in the short
period between December 2007 and June 2010. That money
was given out at near-zero per cent interest rates.
Some of it is still to be returned and sounds more
like a grant rather than a loan.
These figures are now in the public domain because
of an amendment to the Frank-Dodd Wall Street Reform
Act, introduced by Senators Ron Paul and Alan Grayson,
and pursued by others such as the independent and
more radical Bernie Sanders from Vermont. That amendment
required the Government Accountability Office, an
investigative arm of Congress, to undertake a full-scale
audit of the Fed's activities. The report based on
that audit was released on July 21 this year.
The numbers involved made this a bombshell. Towards
the end of 2010, once again ordered by Congress on
the basis of the Frank-Dodd financial reform bill,
the United Sates Federal Reserve had dumped on its
website details of around 21,000 lending transactions
it undertook to deal with the crisis that engulfed
the financial system and threatened a collapse comparable
with the Great Depression. That evidence had shown
that through multiple programmes referred to with
confusing acronyms the Fed had launched a massive
bailout. But those figures had suggested that the
size of the Fed's intervention, though massive, totalled
just $3.3 billion or less than a quarter of US Gross
Domestic Product in 2010. That was far below the $16
trillion figure which has emerged as a result of the
GAO's audit.
Much of this lending was against “toxic assets” as
collateral, which was worthless inasmuch as there
was no market for them. This possibly explains why
the Fed had to take on this responsibility. Operating
through the Federal Reserve's emergency lending powers
allowed the system to bypass Congressional scrutiny,
which was crucial given the opposition from sections
of Congress even to the much smaller TARP or troubled
assets relief programme valued at $800 billion. Thus
the Wall Street-Treasury nexus that crafted the rescue
seems to have consciously chosen the Federal Reserve
as the main fire-fighting agent rather than other
government bodies.
It was noteworthy that though in principle the Federal
Reserve is responsible for providing liquidity to
the banking system it regulates, a large amount of
emergency Fed financing went to firms in the shadow
banking system. Investment banks like Bear Stearns,
Morgan Stanley and even the failed Lehman borrowed
from the Fed. Even Goldman Sachs that had claimed
that it had navigated the crisis without government
support was reported to have received $814 billion
from the Fed. Different firms received different sums
from the $16 trillion trove: $2.5 trillion went to
Citigroup, while Morgan Stanley received $2.04 trillion
and the Royal Bank of Scotland and Deutsche Bank,
a German bank, shared about a trillion.
What has angered some is that the Federal Reserve
was not just supporting US financial firms that were
on the verge of failure but a host of foreign entities
that had been exposed to toxic assets generated in
the US. Beneficiaries of the bail out were not just
large financial firms and corporations in the US,
but also banks and corporations outside the US. Barclays
and the Royal Bank of Scotland from UK, UBS from Switzerland,
Deutsche Bank from Germany, Dexia from Belgium and
a host of other European banks had been bailed out
with Federal Reserve funding. Saving the US financial
system seems to have required saving foreign firms
entangled with that system.
But this is not the only facet giving rise to anger.
As Bernie Sanders's website notes, the GAO audit found
“that the Fed lacks a comprehensive system to deal
with conflicts of interest, despite the serious potential
for abuse. In fact, according to the report, the Fed
provided conflict of interest waivers to employees
and private contractors so they could keep investments
in the same financial institutions and corporations
that were given emergency loans. For example, the
CEO of JP Morgan Chase served on the New York Fed's
board of directors at the same time that his bank
received more than $390 billion in financial assistance
from the Fed. Moreover, JP Morgan Chase served as
one of the clearing banks for the Fed's emergency
lending programs.” And in a shocking instance of conflict
of interest “on Sept. 19, 2008, William Dudley, who
is now the New York Fed president, was granted a waiver
to let him keep investments in AIG and General Electric
at the same time AIG and GE were given bailout funds.”
Finally, the GAO audit found that the Federal Reserve
outsourced its emergency lending programmes to private
contractors, s like JP Morgan Chase, Morgan Stanley,
and Wells Fargo, many of whom were beneficiaries of
the loans provided.
The massive size of the bail-out and the way in which
it was implemented no doubt explains the secrecy that
surrounded the bail-out and the decision to use the
Federal Reserve to avoid public scrutiny. That the
Fed could be used in this fashion makes nonsense of
the theory that the Federal Reserve and central banks
generally can be independent and impeccable managers
of money and finance.
The use of the Fed to bypass scrutiny and finance
a huge bail-out of irresponsible and often manipulative
financial firms is inviting criticism also because
not enough has been done to restore the real economy
to health and support those who have had to bear the
consequences of the unemployment resulting from the
recession induced by the financial crisis. On the
other hand Wall Street firms and some of the banks
are back in the times of good profits and fat bonuses.
The GAO's report, therefore, revives the view that
Main Street has had to pay the price for Wall Street's
misbehaviour, but the government has bailed out the
latter while the former still remains in crisis. "The
Federal Reserve must be reformed to serve the needs
of working families, not just CEOs on Wall Street,"
says Sanders.
* This article was originally published in the newspaper
'The Hindu' and is available at http://www.thehindu.com/business/Economy/article2324652.ece
August
08, 2011.
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