Ben Bernanke is a Princeton professor and an expert on the Great Depression. Yet, everything he has touched has turned to crap. President Bush nominated him and the economy went into the worse recession since the Great Depression. Bernanke failed the American people. Then President Obama renominated him because he felt he did a brilliant job.
Obviously, President Obama seems out of touch with reality. America has record breaking deficits, record unemployment and record foreclosures. We bailed out not just banks but all his Wall Street friends under false pretenses. Yes, all these events were directly or indirectly caused by the decisions made by Bernanke. So the claims made by some is Bernanke saved us from Bernanke.
In a speech Tuesday, Paul Volcker, the imposing former Fed chief who felled the runaway U.S. inflation of the 1980s, chided the current chairman, Ben Bernanke, for toeing “the very edge” of the bank’s legal authority in orchestrating the bailout last month of the beleaguered investment bank Bear Stearns.
“Out of perceived necessity, sweeping powers have been exercised in a manner that is neither natural nor comfortable for a central bank,” Volcker told members of the Economic Club of New York.
Volcker nicely stated the current Fed has failed in its duties. In case you don’t know who Paul Volcker is and wondering why the Obama administration is not listening to a man who might have real solutions to our financial instability, I have referenced a more recent article below. He speaks his mind and has a proven track record of getting things done.
Mr. Volcker, a legendary former chairman of the Federal Reserve Board with much more experience with Wall Street than any current policy maker, was blunt: We need to break up our biggest banks and return to the basic split of activities that existed under the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933 — one highly regulated (and somewhat boring) set of banks to run the payments system, and a completely separate set of financial entities to help firms raise capital (and to trade securities).
This proposal is not just at odds with the regulatory reform legislation then (and now) working its way through Congress; Mr. Volcker is basically saying that what the administration has proposed and what Congress looks likely to enact in early 2010 is essentially bunk.
Speaking to a group of senior finance executives, as reported in The Wall Street Journal on Monday, Mr. Volcker made his point even more forcefully. There is no benefit to running our financial system in its current fashion, with high risks (for society) and high returns (for top bankers). Most of financial innovation, in his view, is not just worthless to society – it is downright dangerous to our broader economic health.
Mr. Volcker seems to make substantive public statements only when he feels important issues are at stake. He also knows exactly how to influence policy — he has not been welcomed in the front door (controlled by the people who have daily meetings with the president), so he’s going round the back, aiming at shifting mainstream views about what are “safe” banks. Many smart technocrats listen carefully to what he has to say.
This strategy is partly about timing — and in this regard Mr. Volcker has chosen his moment well.
The economy is starting to recover, but this process is clearly going to take a while and unemployment will stay high for the foreseeable future. At the same time, our biggest banks are making good money — mostly from trading, not much from lending to small business — and they are lining up to pay very big bonuses.
Not only is this contrast — high unemployment versus bankers’ bonuses — annoying and unfair, it is also not good economics. Bankers are, in effect, being rewarded for taking the risks that created the global crisis and led to huge job losses. And they are being implicitly encouraged to do the same thing again.
The case for keeping big banks in their current configuration is completely lame. Even if we are lucky enough to avoid another major crisis any time soon, the fiscal costs are enormous and coming right at you (and your taxes).
Now that Paul Volcker has picked up his hammer, he will not lightly set it aside. He knows how to sway the policy community and he knows how to escalate when they don’t pay attention. Expect him to pound away until he prevails.
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