Posted by
rycK on Tuesday, March 02, 2010 3:35:33 PM
Krugman Offers an
Essay on Misdirecting Political Power. We can Control the Banks and prevent the
Next Crises, but No Details, Just give us Power.
Abstract: Paul Krugman gives us
a rosy scenario whereby some group of leftist politicians can sit in some Star
Chamber and control the strings of our banking system and prevent the next
banking crisis. All this while he has no problem with massive government
spending far exceeding the 14 trillion dollars we are already in debt. The blame for preventing an ideal solution to
the control of the wayward banks is to be placed upon the opposition party and
the 60 vote Senate Rule and that prevents the left from bringing us prosperity
and social justice through bigger government and more spending. This is a classic case of political
propaganda of the misdirection type.
There are no details or framework offered here just the promise that his
party is right and can identify bank problems before they occur and fix them
and then chase after the culprits that caused them. He offers us the only solution. The biggest threat to the banking system is the 14 trillion
dollars in massive debt we have and Krugman has no problem with our having
spending that and much more. The biggest threat to our banking system is debt
thus Krugman attempts divert our attention away from his party so they can
spend even more. The banks are not the problem so that is the center of this
propaganda theme.
As we
study the propaganda mechanism, using, of course, the premier example: the New York Times, we
continue to learn the tricks of that particular trade. The goal is always to
match or best the finest works of their most famous the revered Pulitzer
Prize winner Walter
Duranty. Paul Krugman is one who portends to identify
with Duranty
and is one of these advanced professionals in the ideological propaganda games,
specializing in the growth of government by any means but frequently showcasing
the discredited Neo-Keynesian economics like a rummage box for talking points.
Today, Paul Krugman
sounds the alarms about the need for some undefined group to ‘protect the masses’
from financial harm. This is one of his
better pieces in that he can pluck the heart strings of the most case-hardened
liberal with soothing promises that we can prevent another bank crisis if only
we put up some czar in fancy clothing with the mandatory Ivy League ‘education’
and allow a cluster of these persons to micromanage
the banking system. This intermezzo is accomplished like a Houdini performance
where there are sparks and lights and tinsel but nothing of substance. The
massive debt that will certainly bring down the banks is not mentioned.
We can prevent another crisis if
we just ‘reform’ the banks:
“So here’s the situation. We’ve been through the
second-worst financial crisis in the history of the world, and we’ve barely
begun to recover: 29 million Americans either can’t find jobs or can’t find
full-time work. Yet all momentum for serious banking reform has been lost. The question now seems to be whether we’ll get a watered-down
bill or no bill at all. And I hate to say this, but the second option is
starting to look preferable.”--Financial
Reform Endgame By Paul Krugman Op-Ed Columnist Published: February
28, 2010 [Emphasis is mine in all quotes.]
This is
classic propaganda. Here, we are apprised of the ‘situation’ and offered some
ugly history to reflect upon with a wide and maudlin vision of the social wreckage at hand, even offering an
approximate count of the victims, and
that the need for this non-defined process is some ‘banking reform’
legislation. The interesting part is the ‘solution’ to the problem is offered
in terms of more tumorous government but the problems are not defined nor are
the details for a solution enumerated. The message is that some lofty intellectual group
with control strings over the banking system could prevent another financial
crisis. Note that many think our
government of the last 30 years set up the current position for a major financial
crunch with massive debt and programs like ‘affordable housing,’ but now they
know what they are doing. They are
recovering? There seems to be some frantic effort to control the banking system
but no brakes are applied to the wild and uncontrollable spending by Congress:
Debt was the problem and more debt
will bring a bigger problem:
"There's no question that the most significant vulnerability as we
emerge from recession is the soaring government debt," Prof Rogoff told
Bloomberg. "It's very likely that it will trigger the
next crisis as governments have been stretched so wide."—Kenneth
Rogoff co Author of book
This Time is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly with Carmen M. Reinhart.
If we
look at the news and at Congress we find that closed doors have again spawned a
wonderful and marvelous bipartisan solution and that is some “consumer protection division within the Federal Reserve” that can deal with, as yet,
undefined problems. Reading further into this reference we find:
The
Eternal Power of the Division:
“The
division would have some independent clout, as
it would be headed by a presidential
appointee and write regulations on
its own -- regulations it would have the power to enforce, The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday. It
would also have its own budget.”-- Reform bill inches along [Emphasis is mine in all quotes.]
Another
Czardom? Here we see the creation of yet
another unconstitutional body that would have legislative power, enforcement
power and its own budget. What a power house! But what problems would it solve?
We get a hint of what this Star Chamber might do from the politically wooden
and far leftist AARP:
“"They want clear information so they can make
better, more informed decisions and greater transparency about the financial
products available to them," said LeaMond.””--
Survey: Seniors Support Increased Consumer Protections Seniors angry over lost
retirement savings, AARP
survey finds
Okay, banks must use “plain language”
for their terms of loans, including mortgages, and also credit cards. This
includes that fees for 401(k) retirement plans to be clearly delineated, to
keep public records on investment advisors to see if they have any previous
charges against them. They already do
that. Then, they want “the costs, risks
and benefits of all the financial products they market and sell using plain
language.” To this we add in the 50
states that would have the independent ability to pass stronger laws than the
federal and to hold counselors who engage in “deceptive marketing practices”
accountable.
What a snarl, 51 flavors of madness.
This list of
AARP demands reads like the Ten Commandments. Everything must be written down
for the investor. The salient fact is that most investment is guess work and
risk is not mentioned here. Why not just limit 401(k)-based retirement systems
to sovereign debt? Oh, that wouldn’t be too good since many sovereign nations,
including the US, have defaulted on
that debt and will do so again very soon like the US because we cannot
sustain 14 trillions in debt. Or, to
keep the AARP vote, why not tie loses in retirement plans directly to the
deficit so no money is lost and only profits are possible? Why not have the
Treasury underwrite the lower equity level in your house and pay the difference
if you want to sell it in a down market?
As is customary in propaganda exercises, the use of
vital and solution-solving references to programs with vague terms and rubber words
with multiple potential meanings give rise to some process where nobody can
predict where this is going. And, I don’t think they want to. They want specific details on bank
operations, but we can have no such rules of some regulatory body with Olympic
powers. In this swamp of syntax and emotion Krugman is nonplussed and
proceeds with his rubber stamp insipidness of first accusing Republicans of the
blockage of some undefined bill and secondly throwing stones at the traditional
senate majority rule of 60:
“The problem, not too
surprisingly, lies in the Senate, and mainly, though not entirely, with Republicans. The House has already
passed a fairly strong reform bill, more or less along the lines proposed by
the Obama administration, and the Senate could probably do the same if it
operated on the principle of majority rule. But it doesn’t — and when you
combine near-universal Republican opposition to serious reform with the wavering of
some Democrats, prospects look bleak.”-- Financial Reform Endgame
The implication here is that the liberals in charge
have some reasonable example of reform and that it just might work unlike what
legislative histories of the last few Congresses have shown us. The opposite is true. As Krugman gives us bits and pieces
of the politics here he takes a second shot at the Republican holdup on
Healthcare:
Whatever
it is pass it anyway!
”There are times when even a highly imperfect reform is much better than nothing; this is very much
the case for health care. But financial reform
is different. An imperfect health care bill can be revised in the light of experience, and if Democrats
pass the current plan there will be steady pressure to make it better. A weak
financial reform, by contrast, wouldn’t be tested until the next big crisis.
All it would do is create a false sense of
security and a
fig leaf for politicians opposed to any serious action — then fail in the
clinch.”--
Here is a convoluted essay of dogmatic elegance.
He may indirectly admit that this reform is ‘imperfect’ but that we need
something even if it is a farce. We further learn that we can indeed pass some nebulous
legislation because there is always some sincere effort to ‘revise’ the
wreckage later, perhaps, like we successfully did with Social Security,
Medicare, Fannie Mae, HUD, The Great Society and other monumental failures we
inherited from leftist Democrats.
The
brutal facts are two fold:
[1] Congress is not capable of avoiding any
massive risk to the banking system as we can see from previous evidence in the
past 100 years. Financial episodes that threaten the economy always strike
quickly as they did in Sep 2007 and they failed to completely understand the
nature of the problem at hand and Congress was clueless as what to do other
than follow the recommendations of Paulson and the Treasury.
[2] If they had a crystal ball and could peer
into the financial abyss then what prevents them from playing politics with that
precious information given that they play at that game in every other
circumstance including world wars, nuclear bombs and other national threats?
Gathering in the notion of lost wealth, it
seems that many think the government should somehow replace lost wealth, equity
in houses, 401(k) balances and jobs. The AARP is a hapless organization that
acts as a servile footstool for government programs as long as they get some
cut especially in insurance business and their members want some kind of
assurance that their assets will continue on and that some committee somewhere
in the ethereal clockwork of the Treasury or elsewhere can steer their ship
away from the shoals. This is about as far away from reality as a fairy tale.
Krugman sums up in finality:
“The only way consumers will be
protected under future antiregulation administrations — and believe me, given
the power of the financial lobby, there will be such administrations — is if
there’s an agency whose whole reason for being is to police bank abuses.”
We now hear about the only way! Spoken like a new dictator drunk with power and with a J. Edgar
Hoover sized stack of FBI files containing dirty information on his enemies. He
has the only solution! We know who the guilty parties are and where to go to
take back the loot! All this prattle saturates the wall paper in Krugman’s cell as he has advocated that we continue spend and spend without
known limits to get back to prosperity. This is a debt-driven deflationary
spiral we are in and we can use more debt to get out? No mention of the
salient fact that even if the banking system were as sound as a box of rocks
the inflation and potential collapse of the economy would proceed even with
perfectly run banks. The banks are not the problem, thus the center of
attention of this propaganda piece.
Krugman’s little essay today is a classic case of misdirection. The
Republicans are to blame for everything and that list probably includes including
Global Warming so only leftist politicians who sit in their little Star Chamber
can work the levers of the banking system to protect us from disaster. This is
a complete farce.
With Krugman it is always tax and spend or, to be novel, spend and then tax and for him this is not cynical
posturing.
rycK
Comments
to: ryckki@gmail.com
Krugman Calls for More Stimulus.
What Else is New?? More Debt and Bigger Government and a Bigger Depression!