Let us hope that this
is a good beginning. We have been
posting on the necessity of this since 2008 and this should trigger several
more that are already in the works. At least
every city of this size needs to take on its own banking.
Importantly it creates
a moral barrier that is internal and carefully watched by the voters. Thus excessive wage demands ultimately get
curbed when it puts mom and dad at risk.
Financial prudence becomes part of the cities DNA.
It is still going to
take some time but at least it is well begun.
Detroit specifically needs to set this up as it exits bankruptcy in
order to provide local credit.
Green Light for
City-owned San Francisco Bank
Author,
Web of Debt, Public Bank Solution; President, Public Banking Institute
Posted:
07/31/2013 10:33 am
When
the Occupiers took an interest in moving San Francisco's money into a city-owned
bank in 2011, it was chiefly on principle, in sympathy with the nationwide Move
Your Money campaign. But recent scandals have transformed the move from a
political statement into a matter of protecting the city's deposits and
reducing its debt burden. The chief roadblock to forming a municipal bank has
been the concern that it was not allowed under state law, but a legal opinion
issued by Deputy City Attorney Thomas J. Owen has now overcome that obstacle.
Establishing
a city-owned San Francisco Bank is not a new idea. According to City Supervisor
John Avalos, speaking at the Public Banking Institute conference in San Rafael
in June, it has been on the table for over a decade. Recent interest was
spurred by the Occupy movement, which adopted the proposal after Avalos
presented it to an enthusiastic group of over 1,000 protesters outside the Bank
of America building in late 2011. David Weidner, writing in The Wall Street
Journal in December of that year, called it "the boldest
institutional stroke yet against banks targeted by the Occupy movement."
But Weidner conceded that:
"Creating
a municipal bank won't be easy. California law forbids using taxpayer money to
make private loans. That would have to be changed. Critics also argue that San
Francisco could be putting taxpayer money at risk."
The
law in question was California Government Code Section 23007, which prohibits a
county from "giv[ing] or loan[ing] its credit to or in aid of any person
or corporation." The section has been interpreted as barring cities and
counties from establishing municipal banks. But Deputy City Attorney Thomas J.
Owen has now put that issue to rest in a written memorandum dated June 21,
2013, in which he states:
"1.
A court would likely conclude that Section 23007 does not cover San Francisco
because the City is a chartered city and county. Similarly, a court would
likely conclude that Article XVI, section 6 of the State Constitution, which
limits the power of the State Legislature to give or lend the credit of cities
or counties, does not apply to the City. . . . [A] court would likely then
determine that neither those laws nor the general limitations on expending City
funds for a municipal purpose bar the City from establishing a municipal bank.
2.
A court would likely conclude that the City may own stock in a municipal bank
and
spend City money to support the bank's operation, if the City appropriated funds for that purpose and the operation of the bank served a legitimate municipal purpose."
spend City money to support the bank's operation, if the City appropriated funds for that purpose and the operation of the bank served a legitimate municipal purpose."
A
number of other California cities that have explored forming their own banks
are also affected by this opinion. As of June 2008, 112 of California's 478
cities are charter cities, including not only San Francisco but Los Angeles,
Richmond, Oakland and Berkeley. A charter city is one governed by its own
charter document rather than by local, state or national laws.
Which
Is Riskier, a Public Bank or a Wall Street Bank?
That
leaves the question whether a publicly-owned bank would put taxpayer money at
risk. The Bank of North Dakota, the nation's only state-owned bank, has posed
no risk to depositors or the state's taxpayers in nearly a century of
successful operation. Further, in this latest recession it has helped the state
achieve a nationwide low in unemployment (3.2 percent) and the only budget
surplus in the country.
Meanwhile,
the recent wave of bank scandals has shifted the focus to whether local
governments can afford to risk keeping their funds in Wall Street banks.
In
making investment decisions, cities are required by state law to prioritize
security, liquidity and yield, in that order. The city of San Francisco moves
between $10 billion and $12 billion through 133 bank accounts in roughly five
million transactions every year; andits deposits are held chiefly at
three banks,
Bank of America, Wells Fargo and Union Bank. The city pays $2.7 million for
banking services, nearly two-thirds of which consist of transaction fees that
smaller banks and credit unions would not impose. But the city cannot use those
smaller banks as depositories because the banks cannot afford the collateral necessary
to protect deposits above $250,000, the FDIC insurance limit.
San
Francisco and other cities and counties are losing more than just transaction
fees to Wall Street. Weidner pointed to the $100 billion that the
California pension funds lost as a result of Wall Street malfeasance in 2008;
the foreclosures that have wrought havoc on communities and tax revenues; and
the liar loans that have negatively impacted not only real estate values but
the economy, employment and local and state budgets. Added to that, we now have
the LIBOR and municipal debt auction riggings and the Cyprus bail-in threat.
On
July 23, 2013, Sacramento County filed a major lawsuit against
Bank of America,
JPMorgan Chase and other mega-banks for manipulating LIBOR rates, a fraud that
has imposed huge losses on local governments in ill-advised interest-rate
swaps. Sacramento is the 15th government agency in California to sue on the
LIBOR rigging, which Rolling Stone's Matt Taibbi calls "the biggest
price-fixing scandal ever."
Other counties in the Bay Area that are suing on the LIBOR fraud are Sonoma and
San Mateo, and the city of Richmond sued in January. Last year, Bank of America
and other major banks were also caught rigging municipal debt service auctions,
for which they had to pay $673 million in restitution.
The
question is, do taxpayers want to have their public monies in a bank that has
been proven to be defrauding them?
Compounding
the risk is the reason Cyprus "bail in" shocker, in which depositor
funds were confiscated to recapitalize two bankrupt Cypriot banks. Dodd-Frank
now replaces taxpayer-funded bank bailouts with consumer-funded bail-ins, which
can force shareholders, bondholders and depositors to contribute to the cost of
bank failure. Europe is
negotiating rules imposing
bail-ins for failed banks, and the FDIC has a U.S. advisory to that effect.
Bank of America now commingles its $1 trillion in deposits
with over $70 trillion in risky derivatives, and has been pegged as one of the
next banks likely to fail in a major gambling mishap.
San
Francisco and other local governments have far more than $250,000 on deposit,
so they are only marginally protected by the FDIC insurance fund. Their
protection is as secured creditors with a claim on bank collateral. The problem
is that in a bank bankruptcy, state and local governments will fall in line
behind the derivative claimants, which are also secured creditors and now have
"super-priority" in bankruptcy.
In a major derivatives calamity of the sort requiring a $700 billion bailout in
September 2008, there is liable to be little collateral left for either the
other secured depositors or the FDIC, which has a meager $25 billion in its
insurance fund. Normally, the FDIC would be backstopped by the Treasury --
meaning the taxpayers -- but Dodd-Frank now
bars taxpayer bailouts of
bank bankruptcies caused by the majority of speculative derivative losses.
The
question today is whether cities and counties can afford not to set up their
own municipal banks, both to protect their money from confiscation and to take
advantage of the very low interest rates and other perks available exclusively
to the banking club. A government that owns its own bank can keep the interest
and reinvest it locally, resulting ingovernment savings of an estimated
35 percent to 40 percent just in interest. Costs
can be reduced, and taxes can be cut or services can be increased. Banking and
credit can become public utilities, sustaining the local economy rather than
mining it for private gain; and banks can again become safe places to store our
money
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