Wall Street Profits, Subsidies and Lobbyists
Wednesday 05 May 2010
by: Jim Hightower, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

(Image: Lance Page / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: onesevenone, Jeremy Brooks)
Wall Street bankers are strutting around like little banty roosters these days, crowing about the phenomenal profits their banks are raking in.
Citigroup has just announced that its profits for just the first three months of this year totaled an incredible $4.4 billion, Goldman Sachs' haul was $3.5 billion, JPMorgan Chase grabbed $3.3 billion and Bank of America took $3.2 billion. Top bankers are cock-a-doodle-doing over these numbers, claiming that such results prove what geniuses they are, how essential they are to America's financial health and, of course, how deserving they are of their multimillion-dollar bonuses.
Before they choke on their own hubris, however, let's note that a huge chunk of these profits are taken directly from a massive, little-known subsidy slipped to them by Ben Bernanke and other regulatory sweethearts in our country's Federal Reserve system. The Fed has deliberately held short-term interest rates to historic lows - less than one half of a percent. Meanwhile, the Treasury Department is paying almost 4 percent interest on longer-term loans that banks make to the government.
This might sound complicated, but it's really a very simple transfer of public wealth to the giant banks. The Fed loans, let's say, a billion dollars to a bank at a half-percent interest. The bank then turns right around and loans that billion dollars to the Treasury Department, collecting 4 percent interest. In short, boys and girls, the banks take our money and loan it back to us for a sweet 3.5 percent profit. Sheer genius!
One wonders: Do bankers wear ski masks when they make these transactions?
By holding interest rates to nearly zero, the Fed is also allowing bankers to steal directly from us depositors and consumers. How much are you earning on your interest-bearing checking account? Chase banks are paying a whopping 0.01 percent. This means that if you keep a $5,000 balance in that account for a year, Chase will pay you 50 cents. Fifty cents to use your money for a year!
Now, try to get a consumer loan from that same bank, and it'll sock you with about 6 percent in interest. It doesn't take much genius to rack up profits with an interest rate spread of 5.5 percentage points - a spread that our government continues to hold at record levels.
In other words, Washington is holding the door open for Wall Street to rob us. At the same time, Wall Street has been able to stall and dilute even the modest consumer protections proposed by President Obama. How do bankers keep getting away with this ongoing robbery? In part, by using another door - the revolving door between Washington and Wall Street.
What do such former congressional leaders as Dick Armey, Bob Dole, Dick Gephardt, Dennis Hastert and Trent Lott have in common? Each is a lobbyist for Wall Street banks and other financial powerhouses. They are among the 70 former Congress-critters that watchdog group Public Citizen found lobbying for bankers last year.
Also, 56 former staffers on the House or Senate banking committees have spun through that same revolving door to become finance-industry lobbyists. These Washington insiders are now drawing six- or seven-figure annual paychecks for using their congressional connections to stop reform and enable more Wall Street thievery.
Especially cynical is Dick Armey, who was House Republican majority leader back when Congress was so enthusiastically deregulating Wall Street, giving the green light to the explosion of banker greed that has now crashed our economy. Army was subsequently rewarded with a multimillion-dollar career as a lobbyist.
While loyally serving his special-interest clients, Armey also became head of a corporate-funded political front group named FreedomWorks. Wearing this hat, Armey-the-lobbyist financed and organized various tea bag rallies, whipping up a frenzy of anti-government anger, which he has twisted into a lobbing campaign to help kill Wall Street reforms.
So, he uses people who are legitimately angry at Washington's meekness toward Wall Street to create more congressional meekness. Thus, the thievery continues, while public cynicism and anger toward government grows hotter - and the thieves just smile.
National radio commentator, writer, public speaker, and author of the book, Swim Against The Current: Even A Dead Fish Can Go With The Flow, Jim Hightower has spent three decades battling the Powers That Be on behalf of the Powers That Ought To Be - consumers, working families, environmentalists, small businesses, and just-plain-folks.
Copyright 2010 Creators.com
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Comments
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One of these banks pays me
Wed, 05/05/2010 - 11:34 — Anonymous (not verified)One of these banks pays me ZERO, NOTHING interest on my saving account. But if I have a loan it will charge more than 24%. In addition every month I have new charges like $ 6 for the statement and other similar. There are now so many charges that I did not see before. The author is right. They get money free that they lend for high profits. But they are above the law, because they make the laws. There is nobody or nowhere to complain because customer is at the mercy of these guys.
Thanks the FORCE they did
Wed, 05/05/2010 - 18:24 — Anonymous (not verified)Thanks the FORCE they did not need another handout. Now, let's see if we can get some of the money with INTEREST they made off US, THE PEOPLE!!!
Congress is hated so much by
Wed, 05/05/2010 - 19:37 — Anonymous (not verified)Congress is hated so much by the average citizen, that each member is literally a Dead Man Walking. We know that any day somebody could snap and fuel all this hostility into violent vigilantism. People see it coming, in fact it is expected in these times of treasonous Wall Street back door deals. It will surprise no one when the blood really starts to hit the fan. Anyone who thinks they are above the law and impervious to citizen rage and justice has only their behavior to blame. A rude awakening doth cometh.
Does all the money these
Thu, 05/06/2010 - 09:39 — eval (not verified)Does all the money these outfits divert to their coffers get lost to circulation thereby impoverishing everyone else?
Andrew Jackson did his best
Thu, 05/06/2010 - 10:08 — Anonymous (not verified)Andrew Jackson did his best to stop the creation of a central bank.
http://politicalinquirer.com/2008/04/06/andrew-jacksons-veto-of-the-central-bank-1832/
The only thing the US
Thu, 05/06/2010 - 15:51 — Jack's Son (not verified)The only thing the US Government should be serving is the Constitution of the United States.
And 'We The People' of course. Today's governments are bloated. A rigorous civil service exam could easily remedy that. It's supposed to be a privilege, not privileged.
How long did it take you to
Fri, 05/07/2010 - 16:40 — Anonymous (not verified)How long did it take you to actually figure this bank robber game. T-Bill and CD holders have seen it going on before Bush left the white house thanks Obama and tim and ben, sure love the new change you gave us.
Dear Jack's Son: I felt as
Tue, 05/11/2010 - 18:41 — Frances in California (not verified)Dear Jack's Son: I felt as you feel . . . until I read C. Wright Mills's "The Power Elite". It's tragic but people at their level really do think they are "above" everyone else; they really do believe in their own superiority, and that all evidence to the contrary never, never touches them or can. Above a certain level in US government, civil service is not even considered; they all got where they are by appointment, by legacy or by theft masquerading as leadership. They believe no mere civil servant can ever touch them. The saddest part? This has been their way for 100 years. It will take more than electing Obama to dislodge them; it will take my generation, your generation and those of our great grandchildren before even an iota of real Constitutional value breaks loose in America. I hope there still is an America by then.
mbt
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