"Peeking Under the Kimono: A Big Banker Speaks Out By Joe Nocera
I received this e-mail message this morning. Its author works for one of the country’s biggest banks. He agreed to let me post it here at Executive Suite so long as I did not use his name. It speaks — quite powerfully, I think — for itself.
I’m a 35-year veteran in the banking industry. And I’ve spent the better part of my career working for the big banks as a small business banker and credit underwriter. Small business lending, in industry terms, is defined as a business that has less than $20 million in revenue and that borrows less than $5 million. I’ve been a lender for most of those years and I’ve been appalled at the changes in the industry.
The government has already done plenty for the big banks. It needs to stop worrying about them now. Instead, it need to pump money into the local community banks because those are the bankers who understand their markets, and know the businesses in their markets. They lunch with small business owners at Rotary Clubs and Chamber meetings. They learn, first-hand, about their businesses and the challenges they face. They go to their stores and factories and “kick the boxes.” And most importantly, they learn about the ways in which those business owners are making the tough decisions in cutting back expenses to stay ahead of this economic crisis."
It seems like a good point. Here's my response:
I was expecting a somewhat sexier story, but no matter.
I know this is going to sound silly from a critic of TARP, but isn’t some of that money supposed to go towards smaller banks? Say, half?
— Don the libertarian Democrat