Archive for July, 2010

Greenspan Believes Bush Tax Cuts Should Be Allowed To Expire.

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

Former Federal Reserve Bank Chairman Alan Greenspan, in a Financial Times interview, reveals that he believes the Bush tax cuts should be allowed to expire as planned.

Greenspan, still referred to as “the Chairman,” is still the same laissez faire advocate familiar to those who take the time to watch the Federal Reserve.  Although his sterling reputation has been seriously damaged by the financial collapse of 2008, he seems unconcerned about that in this interview — at 84 years of age such setbacks apparently dim in importance.

Here’s the relevant quote in the FT article:

“The other part of his record seized on by critics, especially Democrats, is his support for two rounds of tax cuts. One came in 2001 at the beginning of the administration of President George W Bush and one two years later. The week before we met, with an eye to the US’s huge fiscal deficit, he told an interviewer that he supported reversing those tax cuts, a remark seized on by his detractors to argue that he was irresponsible to have backed them in the first place. Here, too, he has a carefully worked-out response. One, both administration and congressional forecasts back then predicted huge fiscal surpluses, so a tax cut was quite sensible. Two, he argued at the time that a second round of cuts should be made conditional on how the economy and the public finances developed, which they were not. Three, he underestimated how his words would be seized on to justify reducing taxes willy-nilly, and he has already admitted that mistake in his 2007 memoirs, The Age of Turbulence. “Criticisms are wholly deserved when you’ve done something wrong, I grant you,” he says. “But I still prefer when I’m criticised that it be accurate.”

Beezer’s long argued that the obsession over tax cuts, and truthfully over monetary tools in general, has prohibited public discourse about other more important dynamics for maintaining robust economies.   Sensible, progressive tax tables that are kept unchanged, provide an all important stability in planning and additionally help pay down government debt accumulated in recessions, while providing surpluses when times are good.  Constant fiddleing with tax rates are a waste of time, in other words.  The more important issues are balanced trade, tariffs, currency manipulation, industrial policies aimed at full employment, innovation and capital investment, among many others.

That Greenspan, the icon of regulatory forebearance (blind regulation), thinks a return to the Clinton tax tables is interesting.  What’s amazing is that the media completely ignores his viewpoint now.  Republicans, to a man and woman, still maintain tax cuts are the cure to all evils.  Despite their guru acknowledging they aren’t.

No wonder we can’t get out of our own way.

As per usual, thanks to Mark Thoma’s economist’s view blog for highlighting this interview.

Local Farming Grows, And Grows. A Good Thing.

Friday, July 30th, 2010

As America’s Industrial Ag. megalith continues to pump out lousy food and toxic chemicals into our bodies, the natural response to use local farming is growing like there’s no tomorrow.

From a USA Today news article here.

“The “local” movement — buying and eating food produced locally rather than shipped from thousands of miles away — has been gaining steam with the steady growth of farmers markets and a phenomenon called community-supported agriculture. CSA members purchase shares of a farmer’s crop for the season. The government doesn’t track the numbers, but Local Harvest, a nationwide directory of small farms, farmers markets and other local food sources, estimates that tens of thousands of American families belong to CSAs, and supply trails demand. The number registered with Local Harvest alone indicates how quickly CSAs have multiplied over the past decade: The directory’s listing has increased from 374 farms in 2000 to 3,660 today.”

Additionally, the Farmer’s Market phenomenon where urban areas set up local farm bazaars, normally once a week, is also growing.  From the USDA this:

“Farmers markets are an integral part of the urban/farm linkage and have continued to rise in popularity, mostly due to the growing consumer interest in obtaining fresh products directly from the farm. Farmers markets allow consumers to have access to locally grown, farm fresh produce, enables farmers the opportunity to develop a personal relationship with their customers, and cultivate consumer loyalty with the farmers who grows the produce. Direct marketing of farm products through farmers markets continues to be an important sales outlet for agricultural producers nationwide. As of mid-2009, there were 5,274 farmers markets operating throughout the U.S.”
And embedded in all this is organic farming.  People are searching for more wholesome foods, wherever they can be found.  This can only be described as a very good  trend.  It not only encourages better food, but it encourages a more environmentally friendly farm.
Industrial Ag basically survives today primarily because of taxpayer subsidies.  The multi billion dollar annual subsidies to mega corn growing farms has wrought tremendous damage to local farming and overall public health.  But the inevitable push back by consumers could eventually lead to a reversal of these subsidies.
From Beezer’s perspective, this reversal can’t come fast enough.  Now if only we can get First Lady Michelle Obama fired up, the nation would have the political spokesman for healthy food it needs desperately.

About This ‘Made In America’ Thingee.

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

Beezer often concentrates on macro type of disucussions.  But in truth it’s individual decisions that make a difference.  Recently we received the following email.  It’s probably like a lot of other emails about the same subject.  But for whatever reason, we thought it clear and positive.  Plus practical.  Something we can all do.

So for what it’s worth:

“One Light Bulb at a Time
A physics teacher in high school, once told the students that while one grasshopper on the railroad tracks wouldn’t slow a train very much, a billion of them would. With that thought in mind, read the following, obviously written by a good American…

Good idea… one light bulb at a time…

Check this out. I can verify this because I was in Lowes the other day for some reason and just for the heck of it I was looking at the hose attachments… They were all made in China. The next day I was in Ace Hardware and just for the heck of it I checked the hose attachments there. They were made in USA. Start looking…

In our current economic situation, every little thing we buy or do affects someone else – even their job … So, after reading this email, I think this lady is on the right track. Let’s get behind her!

My grandson likes Hershey’s candy. I noticed, though, that it is marked made in Mexico now. I do not buy it any more.

My favorite toothpaste Colgate is made in Mexico…. now I have switched to Crest. You have to read the labels on everything…

This past weekend I was at Kroger… I needed 60 W light bulbs and Bounce dryer sheets. I was in the light bulb aisle, and right next to the GE brand I normally buy was an off-brand labeled, “Everyday Value.” I picked up both types of bulbs and compared the stats – they were the same except for the price…

The GE bulbs were more money than the Everyday Value brand but the thing that surprised me the most was the fact that GE was made in MEXICO and the Everyday Value brand was made in – get ready for this – the USA in a company in Cleveland, Ohio.

So throw out the myth that you cannot fi nd products you use every day that are made right here…

So on to another aisle – Bounce Dryer Sheets…. yep, you guessed it, Bounce cost more money and is made in Canada… The Everyday Value brand was less money and MADE IN THE USA! I did laundry yesterday and the dryer sheets performed just like the Bounce Free I have been using for years and at almost half the price!

My challenge to you is to start reading the labels when you shop for everyday things and see what you can find that is made in the USA – the job you save may be your own or your neighbors!

If you accept the challenge, pass this on to others in your address book so we can all start buying American, one light bulb at a time! Stop buying from overseas companies!”

The Scrooge Factor. Meanness In America.

Saturday, July 24th, 2010

From a recent study by three economics students; Sreedhari Desai of Harvard, Arthur Brief of the University of Utah and Jennifer George of Rice University.  The title is “When Executives Rake in Millions:  Meanness in Organizations.”

“The topic of executive compensation has received tremendous attention over the years from both the research community and popular media. In this paper, we examine a heretofore ignored consequence of rising executive compensation. Specifically, we claim that higher income inequality between executives and ordinary workers results in executives perceiving themselves as being all-powerful and this perception of power leads them to maltreat rank and file workers. We present findings from two studies – an archival study and a laboratory experiment – that show that increasing executive compensation results in executives behaving meanly toward those lower down the hierarchy. We discuss the implications of our findings for organizations and offer some solutions to the problem.”

Beezer here.  This basic concern is a long considered one in economics and the related considerations of ethics and morality.  Even the great Adam Smith wrote about this.

From economist Maxine Udall (girl economist) blog, the following.

Adam Smith wrote about the influence of prevailing custom and fashion on moral sentiments in Theory of Moral Sentiments.

The different situations of different ages and countries are apt, in the same manner, to give different characters to the generality of those who live in them, and their sentiments concerning the particular degree of each quality, that is either blamable or praise-worthy, vary, according to that degree which is usual in their own country, and in their own times. 

Nowadays, most of us would object to what appears to be cultural or ethnic stereotyping in some of what Smith wrote. I am unable to say to what extent Smith’s views reflected then existing national and cultural heterogeneity that will have no doubt been rendered by economic development more homogeneous over time. Smith was a sound thinker and critical observer, which causes me to attribute his generalizations about different nationalities somewhat to Scots-Anglo ethnocentrism and somewhat to possible real national differences. Nevertheless, his main point seems valid: that what is “either blamable or praiseworthy” varies “according to that degree which is usual” in our own country and own times, that our moral sentiments and behavior are shaped to some extent by the culture in which we dwell.

Smith goes on to discuss “customary characters” of professions and stages of life, conjecturing that they are shaped by the moral sentiments that accompany and promote the duties of a given profession or of a specific stage in the life cycle. Thus, some professions and life stages are more reticent or staid than others. But, while Smith sees custom in the form of social and professional norms reinforcing good moral sentiments and behavior, he also sees it as something that can erode the same.

It is not therefore in the general style of conduct or behaviour that custom authorises the widest departure from what is the natural propriety of action. With regard to particular usages, its influence is often much more destructive of good morals, and it is capable of establishing, as lawful and blameless, particular actions, which shock the plainest principles of right and wrong.

His point being that just as self-interest can prevent us seeing impropriety and injustice, so too can culture and custom. A slave holder in the antebellum US South had self-interested reasons for believing slavery to be morally acceptable. A poor white worker whose wages were depressed by the availability of slave labor might still find slavery acceptable and worth fighting to preserve because the norms and customs of his culture find no impropriety in slavery.”

Beezer again.  An earlier Beezernotes post  highlighted the work of behavioural scientist Sam Bowles of the Santa Fe Institute.  Bowles has concentrated his study on the causes and effects of inequality in general and income disparity in particular.  From that article:

“At any rate Bowles deserves attention.  And he’s getting it.  His is an interesting story that begins at Harvard with a meeting he and other academics had with the late Martin Luther King Jr.   King was all about social justice, of course.  He came to Harvard seeking economic input that might help his social agenda.  Bowles soon realized his economic training was of little help.  And he wondered why that was so.   

And thus Bowles’ career was sent in one specific direction.  Interestingly, it was his study of primitive hunter gatherer societies that became an early clue as to what might be wrong.  “Inequality breeds conflict, and conflict breeds wasted resources,” Bowles argues……And inequality is sticky…  If you’re born into the bottom 10 percent of incomes, your chances of becoming a member of the top 10% is 1.3%.  For 99 out of 100 in this group, the “rags to riches” story is truly a myth.  And this poverty persists through generations.  It’s a tough problem and one that Bowles (and his students) are making a serious effort at understanding.”

Again from Maxine Udall:

“The conclusion seems self-evident. There is more at stake here than our economy. We must, as a nation, decide whether we want to continue on the path we have been on since roughly 1980. Do we want to continue to reward disproportionately a small fraction of the population that (based on recent performance) seems better at misallocating financial, physical, and human capital through speculative endeavors? Do we want to continue the trickle down of meanness? Shall we live in a society in which trust and fellow feeling are lost, replaced by mindless (not rational, not productive) winner-take-all competition that favors one group disproportionately? If the answers to these questions are all “yes,” then the social fabric may already be torn beyond repair and I fear we are about to learn firsthand how empires crumble.”

Beezer once again.  Obviously the problem has been discussed for quite a while.  Smith published his Moral  Sentiments in 1759 and  Charles Dicken’s character Ebenezer Scrooge appeared in ‘A Christmas Carol’  in 1843.  Two and a half centuries later, income disparity once again rears its ugly head.  And once again, thoughtful folks should be considering the potential impacts. 

Consider, as just one example, the phenomenon of one group of labor (non union normally) being angry at the higher pay received by another labor group (normally unionized), but apparently having little irritation over CEO pay that’s 100 or more times the average pay of other employees of the same company.   Is it come to the point where the CEO pay has become acceptable, but living wages for labor has not? 

 Beezer has witnessed this firsthand.  A citizen is angry because unions get better pay and benefits than they do.  I ask, “Do the unions determine your pay?”   “Of course not,” is the truthful reply.  “Then who does determine your pay?” I ask.  “My boss does,” is the truthful reply.  Then I suggest you be angry with your boss.  Either that or you form a union to negotiate better pay,” is my response.

Of course the underlying problem this angry citizen faces is that it’s government policy to treat private sector employees as commodities.  They receive little or no consideration in our laws.  So while CEO pay skyrockets to unheard of levels, labor does not receive it’s fair share of the profits of the corporation.

We are no longer a nation that believes in being ‘our brother’s keeper’ but one that believes instead in being ‘our brothers competitor.’  This will not end well.

Once again, thanks to economist’s view for opening up this line of reasoning.

More Critique Of The Dominant Economics Used In America.

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

Beezer’s often expressed frustration over the obsession with tax cuts here in America.  This obsession essentially short circuits any consideration that just maybe there are other, more important, influences on whether or not we have a vibrant economy.

While the average citizen has apparently bought into this “starve the beast” philosophy, there is little to no understanding of the economic theories underpinning this attitude.  The truth is there’s a tremendous, ongoing debate, about the validity and usefulness of these theories.

Which brings us to some recent statements by Robert Solow, professor emeritus at MIT, to the House Committee on Science and Technology Subcommittee on Investigations and Oversight.

As a preface.  The main critique of the dominant economic theory is that it makes quite a few assumptions about human behaviour — assumptions that are, at best, oversimplifications.  In his testimony, Solow explains why these assumptions should be, must be, challenged publicly and not accepted blindly by the public.

From Solow’s testimony:

 

It must be unusual for this Committee, or any Congressional Committee, to hold a hearing that is directed primarily at an analytical question. In this case, the question is about macroeconomics, the study of the growth and fluctuations of the broad national aggregates – national income, employment, the price level, and others – that are basic to our country’s standard of living. How are these fundamental aggregates determined, and how should we think about them? While these are tough analytical questions, it is clear that the answers have a direct bearing on the most important issues of public policy.It may be unusual for the Committee to focus on so abstract a question, but it is certainly natural and urgent. Here we are, still near the bottom of a deep and prolonged recession, with the immediate future uncertain, desperately short of jobs, and the approach to macroeconomics that dominates serious thinking, certainly in our elite universities and in many central banks and other influential policy circles, seems to have absolutely nothing to say about the problem. Not only does it offer no guidance or insight, it really seems to have nothing useful to say. My goal in the next few minutes is to try to explain why it has failed and is bound to fail….…it is all the more important to keep pointing out foolishness wherever it appears. Especially when it comes to matters as important as macroeconomics, a mainstream economist like me insists that every proposition must pass the smell test: does this really make sense? I do not think that the currently popular DSGE ( dynamic stochastic general equilibrium) models pass the smell test. They take it for granted that the whole economy can be thought about as if it were a single, consistent person or dynasty carrying out a rationally designed, long-term plan, occasionally disturbed by unexpected shocks, but adapting to them in a rational, consistent way. I do not think that this picture passes the smell test. The protagonists of this idea make a claim to respectability by asserting that it is founded on what we know about microeconomic behavior, but I think that this claim is generally phony. The advocates no doubt believe what they say, but they seem to have stopped sniffing or to have lost their sense of smell altogether.This is hard to explain, but I will try. Most economists are willing to believe that most individual “agents” – consumers investors, borrowers, lenders, workers, employers – make their decisions so as to do the best that they can for themselves, given their possibilities and their information. Clearly they do not always behave in this rational way, and systematic deviations are well worth studying. But this is not a bad first approximation in many cases. The DSGE school populates its simplified economy – remember that all economics is about simplified economies just as biology is about simplified cells – with exactly one single combination worker-owner-consumer-everything-else who plans ahead carefully and lives forever. One important consequence of this “representative agent” assumption is that there are no conflicts of interest, no incompatible expectations, no deceptions.
This all-purpose decision-maker essentially runs the economy according to its own preferences. Not directly, of course: the economy has to operate through generally well-behaved markets and prices. Under pressure from skeptics and from the need to deal with actual data, DSGE modellers have worked hard to allow for various market frictions and imperfections like rigid prices and wages, asymmetries of information, time lags, and so on. This is all to the good. But the basic story always treats the whole economy as if it were like a person, trying consciously and rationally to do the best it can on behalf of the representative agent, given its circumstances. This can not be an adequate description of a national economy, which is pretty conspicuously not pursuing a consistent goal. A thoughtful person, faced with the thought that economic policy was being pursued on this basis, might reasonably wonder what planet he or she is on…..
Working out a story like this is not just an intellectual game, though no doubt it is a bit of that too. To the extent that the observed economy is actually doing the best it can, given the circumstances, it is already adapting optimally to whatever expected or unexpected disturbances come along. It can not do better. It follows that conscious public policy can only make things worse. If the government has better information than the representative agent has, then all it has to do is to make that information public. If prices are imperfectly flexible, then the government can make them more flexible by attacking monopolies and weakening unions. Actually this proposition is dubious on its own.
The point I am making is that the DSGE model has nothing useful to say about anti-recession policy because it has built into its essentially implausible assumptions the “conclusion” that there is nothing for macroeconomic policy to do. I think we have just seen how untrue this is for an economy attached to a highly-leveraged, weakly-regulated financial system. But I think it was just as visibly false in earlier recessions (and in episodes of inflationary overheating) that followed quite different patterns. There are other traditions with better ways to do macroeconomics.”

 

 

Describing The Pervasive Fraud Of Our Banking System. Professor Galbraith.

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

Professor James Galbraith, of the University of Texas, is a powerful speaker and writer/critic of recent economic thought.  Here is a devastating critique of what the financial sector actually did to the American taxpayer, made in a written statement to the Senate Judiciary Committee.

“Chairman Specter, Ranking Member Graham, Members of the Subcommittee, as a former member of the congressional staff it is a pleasure to submit this statement for your record.

I write to you from a disgraced profession. Economic theory, as widely taught since the 1980s, failed miserably to understand the forces behind the financial crisis. Concepts including “rational expectations,” “market discipline,” and the “efficient markets hypothesis” led economists to argue that speculation would stabilize prices, that sellers would act to protect their reputations, that caveat emptor could be relied on, and that widespread fraud therefore could not occur. Not all economists believed this – but most did.

Thus the study of financial fraud received little attention. Practically no research institutes exist; collaboration between economists and criminologists is rare; in the leading departments there are few specialists and very few students. Economists have soft- pedaled the role of fraud in every crisis they examined, including the Savings & Loan debacle, the Russian transition, the Asian meltdown and the dot.com bubble. They continue to do so now. At a conference sponsored by the Levy Economics Institute in New York on April 17, the closest a former Under Secretary of the Treasury, Peter Fisher, got to this question was to use the word “naughtiness.” This was on the day that the SEC charged Goldman Sachs with fraud.

There are exceptions. A famous 1993 article entitled “Looting: Bankruptcy for Profit,” by George Akerlof and Paul Romer, drew exceptionally on the experience of regulators who understood fraud. The criminologist-economist William K. Black of the University of Missouri-Kansas City is our leading systematic analyst of the relationship between financial crime and financial crisis. Black points out that accounting fraud is a sure thing when you can control the institution engaging in it: “the best way to rob a bank is to own one.” The experience of the Savings and Loan crisis was of businesses taken over for the explicit purpose of stripping them, of bleeding them dry. This was established in court: there were over one thousand felony convictions in the wake of that debacle. Other useful chronicles of modern financial fraud include James Stewart’s Den of Thieves on the Boesky-Milken era and Kurt Eichenwald’s Conspiracy of Fools, on the Enron scandal. Yet a large gap between this history and formal analysis remains.

Formal analysis tells us that control frauds follow certain patterns. They grow rapidly, reporting high profitability, certified by top accounting firms. They pay exceedingly well. At the same time, they radically lower standards, building new businesses in markets previously considered too risky for honest business. In the financial sector, this takes the form of relaxed – no, gutted – underwriting, combined with the capacity to pass the bad penny to the greater fool. In California in the 1980s, Charles Keating realized that an S&L charter was a “license to steal.” In the 2000s, sub-prime mortgage origination was much the same thing. Given a license to steal, thieves get busy. And because their performance seems so good, they quickly come to dominate their markets; the bad players driving out the good.

The complexity of the mortgage finance sector before the crisis highlights another characteristic marker of fraud. In the system that developed, the original mortgage documents lay buried – where they remain – in the records of the loan originators, many of them since defunct or taken over. Those records, if examined, would reveal the extent of missing documentation, of abusive practices, and of fraud. So far, we have only very limited evidence on this, notably a 2007 Fitch Ratings study of a very small sample of highly-rated RMBS, which found “fraud, abuse or missing documentation in virtually every file.” An efforts a year ago by Representative Doggett to persuade Secretary Geithner to examine and report thoroughly on the extent of fraud in the underlying mortgage records received an epic run-around.

When sub-prime mortgages were bundled and securitized, the ratings agencies failed to examine the underlying loan quality. Instead they substituted statistical models, in order to generate ratings that would make the resulting RMBS acceptable to investors. When one assumes that prices will always rise, it follows that a loan secured by the asset can always be refinanced; therefore the actual condition of the borrower does not matter. That projection is, of course, only as good as the underlying assumption, but in this perversely-designed marketplace those who paid for ratings had no reason to care about the quality of assumptions. Meanwhile, mortgage originators now had a formula for extending loans to the worst borrowers they could find, secure that in this reverse Lake Wobegon no child would be deemed below average even though they all were. Credit quality collapsed because the system was designed for it to collapse.

A third element in the toxic brew was a simulacrum of “insurance,” provided by the market in credit default swaps. These are doomsday instruments in a precise sense: they generate cash-flow for the issuer until the credit event occurs. If the event is large enough, the issuer then fails, at which point the government faces blackmail: it must either step in or the system will collapse. CDS spread the consequences of a housing-price downturn through the entire financial sector, across the globe. They also provided the means to short the market in residential mortgage-backed securities, so that the largest players could turn tail and bet against the instruments they had previously been selling, just before the house of cards crashed.

Latter-day financial economics is blind to all of this. It necessarily treats stocks, bonds, options, derivatives and so forth as securities whose properties can be accepted largely at face value, and quantified in terms of return and risk. That quantification permits the calculation of price, using standard formulae. But everything in the formulae depends on the instruments being as they are represented to be. For if they are not, then what formula could possibly apply?

An older strand of institutional economics understood that a security is a contract in law. It can only be as good as the legal system that stands behind it. Some fraud is inevitable, but in a functioning system it must be rare. It must be considered – and rightly – a minor problem. If fraud – or even the perception of fraud – comes to dominate the system, then there is no foundation for a market in the securities. They become trash. And more deeply, so do the institutions responsible for creating, rating and selling them. Including, so long as it fails to respond with appropriate force, the legal system itself.

Control frauds always fail in the end. But the failure of the firm does not mean the fraud fails: the perpetrators often walk away rich. At some point, this requires subverting, suborning or defeating the law. This is where crime and politics intersect. At its heart, therefore, the financial crisis was a breakdown in the rule of law in America.

Ask yourselves: is it possible for mortgage originators, ratings agencies, underwriters, insurers and supervising agencies NOT to have known that the system of housing finance had become infested with fraud? Every statistical indicator of fraudulent practice – growth and profitability – suggests otherwise. Every examination of the record so far suggests otherwise. The very language in use: “liars’ loans,” “ninja loans,” “neutron loans,” and “toxic waste,” tells you that people knew. I have also heard the expression, “IBG,YBG;” the meaning of that bit of code was: “I’ll be gone, you’ll be gone.”

If doubt remains, investigation into the internal communications of the firms and agencies in question can clear it up. Emails are revealing. The government already possesses critical documentary trails — those of AIG, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve. Those documents should be investigated, in full, by competent authority and also released, as appropriate, to the public. For instance, did AIG knowingly issue CDS against instruments that Goldman had designed on behalf of Mr. John Paulson to fail? If so, why? Or again: Did Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac appreciate the poor quality of the RMBS they were acquiring? Did they do so under pressure from Mr. Henry Paulson? If so, did Secretary Paulson know? And if he did, why did he act as he did? In a recent paper, Thomas Ferguson and Robert Johnson argue that the “Paulson Put” was intended to delay an inevitable crisis past the election. Does the internal record support this view?

Let us suppose that the investigation that you are about to begin confirms the existence of pervasive fraud, involving millions of mortgages, thousands of appraisers, underwriters, analysts, and the executives of the companies in which they worked, as well as public officials who assisted by turning a Nelson’s Eye. What is the appropriate response?

Some appear to believe that “confidence in the banks” can be rebuilt by a new round of good economic news, by rising stock prices, by the reassurances of high officials – and by not looking too closely at the underlying evidence of fraud, abuse, deception and deceit. As you pursue your investigations, you will undermine, and I believe you may destroy, that illusion.

But you have to act. The true alternative is a failure extending over time from the economic to the political system. Just as too few predicted the financial crisis, it may be that too few are today speaking frankly about where a failure to deal with the aftermath may lead.

In this situation, let me suggest, the country faces an existential threat. Either the legal system must do its work. Or the market system cannot be restored. There must be a thorough, transparent, effective, radical cleaning of the financial sector and also of those public officials who failed the public trust. The financiers must be made to feel, in their bones, the power of the law. And the public, which lives by the law, must see very clearly and unambiguously that is the case.”
 




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