|
Last October, The New York Times ran a devastating story titled "The Guys From 'Government Sachs," spotlighting the many Goldman Sachs alums operating under the firm's former head, Henry Paulson, after he was named treasury secretary. The problem is that Geithner, whom Obama appointed as Paulson's replacement, was totally enmeshed in Paulson's handout to Wall Street while chair of the New York Fed. In that capacity, Geithner was intimately involved in the highly questionable negotiations to bail out AIG, in which Goldman had a $20 billion partnership at risk.
Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd C. Blankfein was present for those rushed and highly guarded weekend meetings that resulted in an initial $85 billion bailout for AIG, which has since grown to $122 billion. As the Times reported, "Mr. Paulson helped select a director from Goldman's own board to lead AIG." That decision to save AIG came after the New York Fed, led by Geithner, summarily spurned requests to save Goldman competitor Lehman Brothers. While he opposed Lehman's attempt to reconstitute as a bank holding company and therefore obtain federal financing, he later supported a similar request by Goldman Sachs.
Another major player in those machinations was Robert Rubin, who headed Goldman Sachs before becoming treasury secretary under President Clinton and who pushed for the radical deregulation that is at the center of the banking crisis.
Geithner was a protege of Rubin's in that effort, as was Lawrence Summers, who went on to be Clinton's treasury secretary after Rubin left to head Citigroup. Regrettably, Summers is now the key White House economics adviser.
Rubin, Geithner and Summers are hell-bent on denying the responsibility of their deregulation initiatives for the economic crisis. But the reality is that the merger of investment and commercial banks with insurance companies and stock brokers was illegal before the approval of their legislation reversing the Glass-Steagall Act passed under Franklin Delano Roosevelt. So too the newfangled financial instruments exempted from any government regulation, thanks to the Commodity Futures Modernization Act that Summers got Clinton to sign into law a month before he left office.
The reversal of Glass-Steagall unleashed the robber barons, as was freely conceded by Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein in an interview he gave to the New York Times in June of 2007. "If you take an historical perspective," Blankfein said, gloating back then about the vast expansion of Goldman Sachs, "we've come full circle, because that is exactly what the Rothchilds or J.P. Morgan the banker were doing in their heyday. What caused an aberration was the Glass-Steagall Act."
The "aberration" being the sensible regulation of Wall Street to prevent another depression, which now seems dangerously close at hand. Since Glass-Steagall was repealed in 1999, Goldman Sachs experienced a 265 percent growth in its balance sheet, totaling $1 trillion in 2007.
What we need is an honest accounting of how we got into this mess, beginning with an investigation of the role of Goldman Sachs as the most insidious Wall Street player. But we are not likely to get that from an administration populated by Goldman's Washington allies.
On Tuesday, new Attorney General Eric Holder assured Wall Street that "we're not going to go out on any witch hunts." But what if the once-celebrated financial wizards, still allowed to dominate our economic policies, are indeed wicked witches?
© Creators Syndicate
Comments? Send a letter to the editor.Albion Monitor February 6, 2009 (http://www.albionmonitor.com)All Rights Reserved. Contact rights@monitor.net for permission to use in any format. |
|