Down it goes again

Apparently, Monday’s upward spike in the stock market was nothing more than a blip. After a record increase — it surged 936 points on Monday — the Dow Jones Industrial average fell by almost 80 points Tuesday and cratered today, dropping 733 points.

The reason, according analysts quoted by The New York Times, is that

the market was continuing to react to the same fundamental factors that drove it lower in the morning, including weakness in the manufacturing sector, the large drop in retail sales and the growing realization that there will be no quick fix to the credit
crisis
.

The stock selloff occurs just a day after the federal government agreed to buy into American banks to prop them up, essentially nationalizing them. Though the nationalization plan, as Robert Weissman of Essential Action wrote in Common Dreams, “the government may be obtaining a modest ownership stake in the banks, but no control over their operations.”

In keeping with the terms of the $700 billion bailout legislation, under which the bank share purchase plan is being carried out, the Treasury Department has announced guidelines for executive compensation for participating banks. These are laughable. The most important rule prohibits incentive compensation arrangements that “encourage unnecessary and excessive risks that threaten the value of the financial institution.” Gosh, do we need to throw $250 billion at the banks to persuade executives not to adopt incentive schemes that threaten their own institutions?

The banks reportedly will not be able to increase dividends, but will be able to maintain them at current levels. Really? The banks are bleeding hundreds of billions of dollars — with more to come — and they are taking money out to pay shareholders? The banks are not obligated to lend with the money they are getting. The banks are not obligated to re-negotiate mortgage terms with borrowers — even though a staggering one in six homeowners owe more than the value of their homes.

“The government’s role will be limited and temporary,” President Bush said in announcing today’s package. “These measures are not intended to take over the free market, but to preserve it.”

That may not be enough. The role of the financial sector in our economy has grown beyond what can be described as healthy, reaching dizzying and dangerous levels. Kevin Phillips, author of “Bad Money: Reckless Finance, Failed Politics, and the Global Crisis of American Capitalism,” says the reliance on the financial sector offers a “chilling parallel with the failures of the old powers.”

In the 18th century, the Dutch thought they could replace their declining industry and physical commerce with grand money-lending schemes to foreign nations and princes. But a series of crashes and bankruptcies in the 1760s and 1770s crippled Holland’s economy. In the early 1900s, one apprehensive minister argued that Britain could not thrive as a “hoarder of invested securities” because “banking is not the creator of our prosperity but the creation of it.” By the late 1940s, the debt loads of two world wars proved the point, and British global economic leadership became history.

In the United States, the financial services sector passed manufacturing as a component of the GDP in the mid-1990s. But market enthusiasm seems to have blocked any debate over this worrying change: In the 1970s, manufacturing occupied 25 percent of GDP and financial services just 12 percent, but by 2003-06, finance enjoyed 20-21 percent, and manufacturing had shriveled to 12 percent.

The downside is that the final four or five percentage points of financial-sector GDP expansion in the 1990s and 2000s involved mischief and self-dealing: the exotic mortgage boom, the reckless bundling of loans into securities and other innovations better left to casinos. Run-amok credit was the lubricant. Between 1987 and 2007, total debt in the United States jumped from $11 trillion to $48 trillion, and private financial-sector debt led the great binge.

Washington looked kindly on the financial sector throughout the 1980s and 1990s, providing it with endless liquidity flows and bailouts. Inexcusably, movers and shakers such as Greenspan, former treasury secretary Robert Rubin and the current secretary, Henry Paulson, refused to regulate the industry. All seemed to welcome asset bubbles; they may have figured the finance industry to be the new dominant sector of economic evolution, much as industry had replaced agriculture in the late 19th century. But who seriously expects the next great economic power — China, India, Brazil — to have a GDP dominated by finance?

With the help of the overgrown U.S. financial sector, the United States of 2008 is the world’s leading debtor, has by far the largest current-account deficit and is the leading importer, at great expense, of both manufactured goods and oil. The potential damage if the world soon undergoes the greatest financial crisis since the 1930s is incalculable. The loss of global economic leadership that overtook Britain and Holland seems to be looming on our own horizon.

He wrote this in the spring as it appeared that the teetering economy was stabilizing, well before the current implosion, making him seem a bit clairvoyant.

But he has been banging this drum for a while, along with William Greider and others.

But diagnosing the crisis is only part of what we have to consider. The question is where we go from here. First, we should revamp the Paulson plan so that buying shares in the banks gives the federal government a voting interest.

More importantly, we need to invest heavily in the American people, as Howard Zinn, the radical progressive historian, suggests in The Nation. He says we should

take that huge sum of money, $700 billion, and give it directly to the people who need it. Let the government declare a moratorium on foreclosures and help homeowners pay off their mortgages. Create a federal jobs program to guarantee work to people who want and need jobs.

We have a historic and successful precedent. The government in the early days of the New Deal put millions of people to work rebuilding the nation’s infrastructure. Hundreds of thousands of young people, instead of joining the army to escape poverty, joined the Civil Conservation Corps, which built bridges and highways, cleaned up harbors and rivers. Thousands of artists, musicians and writers were employed by the WPA’s arts programs to paint murals, produce plays, write symphonies. The New Deal (defying the cries of “socialism”) established Social Security, which, along with the GI Bill, became a model for what government could do to help its people.

That can be carried further, with “health security”–free healthcare for all, administered by the government, paid for from our Treasury, bypassing the insurance companies and the other privateers of the health industry. All that will take more than $700 billion. But the money is there: in the $600 billion for the military budget, once we decide we will not be a warmaking nation anymore, and in the bloated bank accounts of the superrich, once we bring them down to ordinary-rich size by taxing vigorously their income and their wealth.

Don’t expect these proposals — at least not yet. Barack Obama has hinted at a public-works-based stimulus, but a small one. Like Sen. John McCain — whose economic plan appears to consist solely of cutting the cabe cutting capital gains tax — Sen. Obama has offered unfortunately narrow economic proposals.

That said, Franklin Delano Roosevelt did not run on the New Deal, but moved quickly in that direction as it became clear he had no choice. Maybe, Sen. Obama will follow that example if he is elected.

Is the bailout changing?

Henry Paulson may be ready to do what he should have done several weeks ago, when it was apparent just how dismal the financial situation is.

According to The Washington Post,

U.S. regulators are preparing to expand their response to the financial crisis beyond the $700 billion financial rescue package that was approved by Congress and signed into law this month, sources familiar with the matter said today.

An additional plan is set to be announced soon, most likely tomorrow morning, the sources said on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

Some of the sources said they expect the plan to go beyond the bailout by taking steps to shore up interbank lending and bank health, as well as possibly expanding deposit insurance beyond the current $250,000.

The news comes at a time when European governments are proving to be far more aggressive in their efforts to save world financial system from collapse, offering a plan to directly buy interests in failing lending institutions as a way to infuse the system with money and prop up the banks.

European governments put hundreds of billions of dollars into their banking systems Monday and the U.S. Federal Reserve announced it would back up their effort by making U.S. currency available in unlimited amounts, as efforts continued to strengthen the foundations of the world financial system.

The report goes on to say,

In London on Monday morning, the British government said it would partially take over several major banks, providing $34 billion to the Royal Bank of Scotland and another $29 billion to Lloyds TSB and HBOS, two banks that are in the process of merging. The move would give the British government about a 60 percent stake in RBS and a 40 percent stake in the bank created by the Lloyds-HBOS merger.

Separately, the cabinet in Germany okayed a plan to guarantee about $500 billion in bank loans and provide about $136 billion in goverment capital to Germany banks. In Paris, French President Nicolas Sarkozy said the French government will make about $54 billion availble to bolster bank capital and offer guarantees to about $436 billion in bank loans.

Details of other government actions are expected later Monday. The moves followed a deal reached Sunday in Paris by European governments who agreed to provide capital for banks and take other steps to restart credit markets so that financial firms will begin lending again to businesses, consumers and one another. Credit markets in recent months have virtually stopped functioning, depriving the world economy of a major source of operating cash.

While the Paulson plan allows the federal government to buy a stake in banks, the treasury secretary has not made it a major component of his rescue mission — essentially asking Congress to create a $700 billion line of credit so that the government could buy up bad debt. Buying a stake in the institutions, however, would allow the government to have more direct oversight and would give taxpayers — who will be on the hook for the bailout — potentially see some benefit.

This is the approach George Soros has been advocating — recapitalizing the banks, “recogniz(ing) the losses and replenish(ing) the equity, which he says cannot be done “by taking their assets off their hands.”

He is critical of Paulson, telling Bill Moyers on Friday that the treasury secretary “represents the very kind of financial engineering that has gotten us into the trouble.” He said that Paulson’s initial plan — “to create a super SIV, special investment vehicle, to take care of the other special investment vehicles” — must look more like the European bailouts.

He told Moyers that he would take the bailout cash and invest it directly “into the capital of the bank so that the capital equity can sustain at least 12 times the amount of lending.”

GEORGE SOROS: You see, what is needed now the bank examiners know how those banks stand. And they can say how much capital they need. And they could then raise that capital from the private market. Or they could turn to this new organization and get the money from there. That would dilute the shareholders. It would hurt the shareholders.

BILL MOYERS:Of the bank?

GEORGE SOROS:Of the banks. Which I think Paulson wanted to avoid. He didn’t want to go there. But it has to be done. But then, the shareholders could be offered the right to provide the new capital. If they provide the new capital then there’s no dilution. And the rights could be traded. So if they don’t have the money, other people could, the private sector could put in the money. And if the private sector is not willing to do it then the government does it.

And money has to be — underline and capitalize this — provided to homeowners to stem the foreclosure tide “to prevent housing crisis from overshooting on the downside the way they overshot on the upside.”

GEORGE SOROS:You can’t arrest the decline, but you can definitely slow it down by minimizing the number of foreclosures and readjusting the mortgages to reflect the ability of people to pay. So you have to renegotiate mortgages rather than foreclose.

And you provide the government guarantee. But the loss has to be taken by those who hold the mortgages, not by the taxpayer.

BILL MOYERS:You mean the homeowner doesn’t take the loss. The lender.

GEORGE SOROS:The homeowner needs to get relief so that he pays less because
he can’t afford to pay. And the value of the mortgage should not exceed the
value of the house. Right now you already have 10 million homes where you have
negative equity. And before you are over, it will be more than 20 million.

That this is not on the table is mindboggling, given the impact that foreclosures have on the values of neighboring properties and the impact they have on the economy at large.

What was so shocking about the bailout plan as devised was that it was prepared to hold the institutions who created this mess — the ones that created financial instruments that lacked any connection to actual money or value and then traded them back, forth and sideways — harmless while leaving taxpayers and poor homeowners to feel the pain.

Bush’s bad economic mojo

I’ve heard it said that, more than crafting specific policy, a president’s impact on the economy comes from the confidence he inspires in the country. If citizens can be reassured, then the economy has a better shot at bouncing back.

I’m not sure I believe that, but if we want to apply this notion to the events of the last couple of weeks, the cratering (the media’s new favorite word) of the stock market and public confidence in the economy at the same time that the Bush administration has attempted to calm nerves just shows how irrelevant the president (pictured above — White House photo by David Bohrer — during his Friday address on the economy) has become.

Read this from Dan Froomkin, which I think says it a lot better:

When it comes to the current financial crisis, it’s become pretty clear that an appearance by President Bush doesn’t calm nerves. It rubs them raw.

With global markets in a state of panic, with the world talking about the end of American capitalism, with ordinary citizens watching in despair as their savings vanish, we could all use some reassurance.

Had the president this morning announced something new, specific and verifiable, it might have helped. Most economists are persuaded that the semi-nationalization of American banks through direct infusions of capital is our best bet at this point. And the administration is reportedly working on a plan to do just that.

But today all Bush gave us was limp cheerleading, vaguely assuring us he’s doing everything possible.

The president seems checked out. His approval ratings are in the toilet. His credibility is shot. He’s arguably responsible for this mess in the first place. And his presence and his words have led to more fear and panic, not less.

Jan. 20 cannot come fast enough.

Feeding the hungry when we need to fight hunger

This is welcome news, given the dire straits faced by food banks in the state. The problem is that even with a program like this supplementing the food collected and distributed by private groups is that it does not address the underlying problems that lead to food insecurity, hunger and poverty in the first place.

1. A loss of jobs in New Jersey and nationally

New Jersey lost 700 private-sector jobs in August, bringing the total number of job losses in the state to 14,600 for the year so far, according to data released by the New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development two weeks ago.

“New Jersey’s employment picture continues to weaken, and with the ongoing crisis in the financial sector, we can expect more job losses in the near future,” said Philip Kirschner, president of the New Jersey Business and Industry Association.

This past July, the state’s unemployment rate rose to 5.9 percent, yet still remains below the national unemployment rate of 6.1 percent. Employment has gone down in the major sectors of the state’s private-sector economy, according to the report.

In the first eight months of 2008, the manufacturing sector lost 7,800 jobs, construction lost 3,100 and the service sector lost 3,800, according to the report. The only sectors, which experienced significant employment increases, were in the education and health services sector and the information sector, according to the data.

2. Unequal income growth

Economic growth in New Jersey over the past 20 years has not been broadly shared by the state’s residents because the wealthiest have seen their incomes rise at a much greater pace than anyone else. In other words, the income inequality gap in New Jersey continues to widen and in some respects at a faster rate than in most of the nation.

3. A minimum wage that has not kept up with inflation

When New Jersey raised its minimum wage to $6.15 in 2005 and $7.15 in 2006, the state took an important step in the right direction for hundreds of thousands of working families. But, despite this increase, the minimum wage has simply not kept up with the rising cost of living—especially given skyrocketing prices for food and energy. New Jersey depends on its front-line workers to drive the state’s economy and perform important functions for residents, yet they cannot make ends meet on today’s minimum wage.

The New Jersey Minimum Wage Advisory Commission recognized this problem in its December 2007 report on the adequacy of the state minimum wage. Had the Legislature adopted the Commission’s recommendation to raise the minimum wage to $8.25 an hour and establish automatic annual cost-of-living increases, New Jersey’s workers would have received much-needed relief as they struggle to support their families and build a future.

4. A frayed social safety net at the state and federal levels

5. A cost of living that is higher than low-wage workers can afford

Many families do not earn Self-Sufficiency Wages, particularly if they have recently entered (or re-entered) the workforce or live in high cost or low-wage areas. Such families cannot afford their housing and food and child care, much less other expenses and are forced to choose between basic needs.