Tuesday, October 13, 2009

How the Servant Became a Predator: Finance's Five Fatal Flaws

William K. Black has written a fascinating piece on how Big Finance has abused itself and us.

financial sector What exactly is the function of the financial sector in our society? Simply this: Its sole function is supplying capital efficiently to aid the real economy. The financial sector is a tool to help those that make real tools, not an end in itself. But five fatal flaws in the financial sector's current structure have created a monster that drains the real economy, promotes fraud and corruption, threatens democracy, and causes recurrent, intensifying crises.

1. The financial sector harms the real economy...

2. The financial sector produces recurrent, intensifying economic crises here and abroad...

3. The financial sector's predation is so extraordinary that it now drives the upper one percent of our nation's income distribution and has driven much of the increase in our grotesque income inequality...

4. The financial sector's predation and its leading role in committing and aiding and abetting accounting control fraud combine to:...

5. The CEOs of the largest financial firms are so powerful that they pose a critical risk to the financial sector, the real economy, and our democracy...

Caution: Never Forget the Need to Fix the Real Economy

Economic reform efforts are focused almost entirely on fixing finance because the finance sector is so badly broken that it produces recurrent, intensifying crises. The latest crisis brought us to the point of global catastrophe, so the focus on finance is obviously rational. But the focus on finance carries a grave risk. Remember, the sole purpose of finance is to aid the real economy. Our ultimate focus needs to be on the real economy, which creates goods and services, our jobs, and our incomes. The real economy came off the rails at least three decades ago for the great majority of Americans.

We need to commit to fixing the real economy by guaranteeing that everyone willing to work can work and making the real economy sustainable rather than recurrently causing global environmental crises. We must not spend virtually all of our reform efforts on the finance sector and assume that if we solve its defects we will have solved the other fundamental reasons why the real economy has remained so dysfunctional for decades. We need to be work simultaneously to fix finance and the real economy.

Inserted from <Huffington Post>

Big Finance needs to be broken up, and the pieces, heavily regulated to ensure that they do not exceed their proper role.

Now I’ve just given you a taste here.  Under four of the five listed flaws, Back has explained it in detail and supported his view.  I strongly recommend clicking through to read the whole thing.

2 comments:

the walking man said...

The problem is that when the discussion turns to the economic people's eyes glaze over and they think it is over their heads.

hence the time for them of ability to express the ideas of reform in non technical terms.

How many realized the financial sector was becoming the economy as they signed up for ten or twenty credit cards? None. and still we are told to trust them which thrust the sword in.

TomCat said...

I try to do the best I can at that, Mark. Although I live in poverty, I do have good credit, only because I allowed the balance to increase only as survival required. As for those that did those thing, the Bible is quite wise in referring to people as sheep. Why? Sheep are stupid.