Friday, March 13, 2009

We need to break or substantially reduce the political power of the banks in the U.S.

From The Baseline Scenario:

"Reining In Banks (Roundtable On Economist.Com)

with 3 comments

The Economist is running an on-line discussion of Dani Rodrik’s article in their print edition on re-regulation strategy. The full discussion is here - follow that link for my contribution, the reactions of others, and Dani’s original piece.

Here’s what I said.

Dani Rodrik is right that good financial regulation begins and pretty much ends at home. Attempts to build a global regulatory structure, for example as currently under discussion by the G20, seem unlikely seriously constrain the ability of big banks to get themselves - and the rest of us - into major financial disasters.

These big banks are very powerful, exerting a great deal of political influence in the United States and arguably even more in some other industrialized countries. The U.S. bristles at potentially critical footnotes in IMF documents assessing its macroeconomic policies - how would it react to tough language or even real action from an international body that claimed supervisory authority over American banks?

The strong position of the U.S. vis-à-vis the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has, for a long time, been an awkward reminder that all members of the IMF are not created equal. But of late, with deep flaws in the heart of the world’s largest financial system, the asymmetry of international power and lack of effective oversight over the U.S. is actually dangerous for the world economy. There is no global solution to this very American problem.

The only way forward is to dramatically change the effectiveness of regulation in the U.S. But this will not happen primarily through tweaking de jure rules or attempting to create one regulator with responsibility for the whole system - whether or not this is the Federal Reserve. Again, the banks have too much power - they will capture, influence, or arbitrage their way around any regulatory structures so that the next bubble, whenever and wherever it appears, will be at least as damaging as the last.

We need to break or substantially reduce the political power of the banks in the U.S. and in all other countries where this is a pressing first-order issue. This is a tall order, but if the problems gain sufficient visibility and our political leaders focus, we can make progress.

Written by Simon Johnson

March 13, 2009 at 5:13 am"

Me:

I’d like the idea of banks as holding companies to be taken up. It’s a big problem for the FDIC and the size issue, but notice:

http://www.thedeal.com/dealscape/2009/03/bank_watch_96.php

“Bank of America is now valued at around $30 billion, but the bank’s retail bank, commercial bank, credit card business, mortgage lending, investment bank and its acquisition of Merrill Lynch are worth almost nothing, argues Breaking Views. The remaining value in the institution comes from stakes it owns in Banco Santander SA’s Mexico outfit, Brazil’s Banco Itau, BlackRock Inc. and China Construction Bank.

http://incakolanews.blogspot.com/2009/03/citigroup-and-banamex-theres-fight.html

Well, maybe yes and maybe no. It was interesting that Citi’s CEO, Vikram “still got a job” Pandit, spent two days down Mexico way earlier this month. He met with the bank honchos of course, but also gov’t lackeys and the regulator dudes too, so we hear. He also made it very plain that Citigroup plans to hold on to Banamex, saying things like the Banamex is Citi and Citi is Banamex and may sacred matrimory reign etc etc. Pandit dixit Feb 20th 2009:

“I want to make it very clear: Citi and Banamex are one and the same……The future of Citi is in emerging markets. It’s in Latin America. It’s in Mexico with Banamex.”

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/86c1cf26-aefc-11dd-a4bf-000077b07658.html?nclick_check=1

“Mr Liddy has said he wants to sell most of AIG’s life assurance operations, and close its troubled financial services unit, to create a smaller company focused on its general insurance business around the world.

However, he reiterated that he wanted to keep a majority interest in its Asian life assurance and savings business – one of the jewels in AIG’s crown.”

I added AIG to make the point. Do you notice anything funny? That’s right, the “crown jewels” and profits are all in their foreign holdings. That’s what they’re committed to keeping. That’s what our bridge loans are intended to do: Allow them not to have to sell their money-making foreign businesses.

So, what’s the plan about banks as holding companies?

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