The USA has created serious problems for itself in
terms of the various laws put in place
to protect the super banks who have simply taken everyone to the wall
and said ‘or else’. It really cannot
stand.
The market will respond by shunning the super banks
and creating local institutions able to do all of it. In the process this will also curb union
power which is bent on the same behavior as our super banks.
What everyone has learned the hard way is that when
the government is actually the lender and equity source of last resort, it is
really stupid to allow overconcentration.
Too big to fail has come to possibly mean that a bad bet by a US Bank in the third world will be backstopped by
the US fed. This cannot possibly be but
that is what the selling of US mortgage backed securities became when the
criminal got loose..
The Detroit Bail-In Template: Fleecing Pensioners to
Save the Banks
By Ellen Brown
Global Research,
August 05, 2013
The Detroit
bankruptcy is looking suspiciously like the bail-in template
originated by the G20’s Financial Stability Board in 2011,
which exploded on the scene in Cyprus in 2013 and is now becoming the model
globally. In Cyprus, the depositors were “bailed in” (stripped of a major
portion of their deposits) to re-capitalize the banks. In Detroit, it is the
municipal workers who are being bailed in, stripped of a major portion of their
pensions to save the banks.
Bank of America Corp. and UBS
AG have been given priority over other bankruptcy claimants,
meaning chiefly the pensioners, for payments due on interest rate swaps they
entered into with the city. Interest rate swaps – the exchange of interest rate
payments between counterparties – are sold by Wall Street banks as a form of
insurance, something municipal governments “should” do to protect their loans
from an unanticipated increase in rates. Unlike ordinary insurance, however,
swaps are actually just bets; and if the municipality loses the bet, it can owe
the house, and owe big. The swap casino is almost entirely unregulated, and it
is a rigged game that the house virtually always wins. Interest rate swaps are
based on the LIBOR rate, which has now been proven to be manipulated by the
rate-setting banks; and they were a major contributor to
Detroit’s bankruptcy.
Derivative
claims are considered “secured” because the players must post collateral to
play. They get not just priority but “super-priority” in bankruptcy, meaning
they go first before all others, a deal pushed through by Wall Street in the
Bankruptcy Reform Act of 2005. Meanwhile, the municipal workers, whose pensions
are theoretically protected under the Michigan Constitution, are classified as
“unsecured” claimants who will get the scraps after the secured creditors put
in their claims. The banking casino, it seems, trumps even the state
constitution. The banks win and the workers lose once again.
Systemically
Dangerous Institutions Are Moved to the Head of the Line
The argument for the
super-priority of derivative claims is that nonpayment on these
bets represents a “systemic risk” to the financial scheme. Derivative bets are
cross-collateralized and are so inextricably entwined in a $600-plus trillion
house of cards that the whole financial scheme could go down if the betting
scheme were to collapse. Instead of banning or regulating this very risky
casino, Congress has been persuaded by the masterminds of Wall Street that it
needs to be preserved at all costs.
The same
tortured logic has been used to justify the fact that the federal government
deigned to bail out Wall Street but not Detroit. Supposedly, the mega-banks
pose a systemic risk and Detroit doesn’t. On July 29th, former Obama
administration economist Jared Bernstein pursued this
line of reasoning on his blog, writing:
[T]he correct
motivation for federal bailouts — meaning some combination of managing a
bankruptcy, paying off creditors (though often with a haircut), or providing
liquidity in cases where that’s the issue as opposed to insolvency – is systemic
risk. The failure of large, major banks, two out of the big three auto
companies, the secondary market for housing – all of these pose unacceptably
large risks to global financial markets, and thus the global economy, to a
major industry, including its upstream and downstream suppliers, and to the
national housing sector.
Because a)
there’s not much of a case that Detroit is systemically connected in those
ways, and b) Chapter 9 of the bankruptcy code appears to provide an adequate
way for it to deal with its insolvency, I don’t think anything like a large
scale bailout is forthcoming.
Holding Main
Street Hostage
Detroit’s
bankruptcy poses no systemic risk to Wall Street and global financial markets.
Fine. But it does pose a systemic risk to Main Street, local governments, and
the contractual rights of pensioners. Credit rating agency Moody’s stated in a recent
report that if Detroit manages to cut its pension obligations,
other struggling cities could follow suit. The Detroit bankruptcy is
establishing a template for wiping out government pensions everywhere. Chicago
or New York could be next.
There is also
the systemic risk posed to the municipal bond system. Bryce Hoffman, writing in The Detroit News on
July 30th, warned:
Detroit’s
bankruptcy threatens to change the rules of the municipal bond game and already
is making it more expensive for the state’s other struggling towns and school
districts to borrow money and fund big infrastructure projects.
In fact, one
bond analyst told The Detroit News that he has spoken to major institutional
investors who have already decided to stop, for now, buying any Michigan bonds.
The real concern
of bond investors, says Hoffman, is not the default of Detroit but the
precedent the city is setting. General obligation municipal bonds have always
been viewed as a virtually risk-free investment. They are unsecured, but
bondholders have considered themselves protected because the bonds are backed
by the “unlimited taxing authority” of the government that issued them.
Detroit, however, has shown that the city’s taxing authority is far from
unlimited. It already has the highest property taxes of any major city in
the country, and it is bumping up against a ceiling imposed by the state
constitution. If Detroit is able to cut its bond debt in half or more by
defaulting, other distressed cities are liable to look very closely at
following suit.
Hoffman writes:
The bond market
is warning that this will make Michigan a pariah state and raise borrowing
costs — not just for Detroit and other troubled municipalities, but also for
paragons of fiscal virtue such as Oakland and Livingston counties.
However, writes
Hoffman:
Gov. Rick Snyder
dismisses that threat and says the bond market is just trying to turn Detroit
away from a radical solution that could become a model for other struggling
cities across America.
A Safer, Saner, More
Equitable Model
Interestingly,
Lansing Mayor Virg Bernero, Snyder’s Democratic opponent in the last
gubernatorial race, proposed a solution that
could have avoided either robbing the pensioners or scaring off the
bondholders: a state-owned bank. If the state or the city had its own bank, it
would not need to borrow from Wall Street, worry about interest rate swaps, or
be beholden to the bond vigilantes. It could borrow from its own
bank, which would leverage the local government’s capital into
credit, back that credit with the deposits created by the government’s own
revenues, and return the interest to the government as a dividend, following
the ground-breaking model of the state-owned Bank of North Dakota.
There are other
steps that need to be taken, and soon, to prevent a cascade of municipal
bankruptcies. The super-priority of derivatives in bankruptcy needs to be
repealed, and the protections of Glass Steagall need to be restored. While we
are waiting on a very dilatory Congress, however, state and local governments
might consider protecting themselves and their revenues by setting up their own
banks.
Ellen Brown is
an attorney, president of the Public Banking Institute, and author of twelve
books, including the best-selling Web of Debt and
its 2013 sequel, The Public Bank Solution.
Her websites are
and
oh the poor detroit civil servants.
ReplyDeleteAll you really need to know about Detroit, which is facing a $327 million budget gap, is that last year it was discovered to still be paying for a “horseshoer” (or farrier) on the Detroit Water & Sewer Department (DWSD) payroll. This individual costs some $56,000 in pay and benefits, despite the city not having any horses to shoe in his department.
That is over $25.00 per hour to do NOTHING. And he is at the low end. The average DWSD gets over $40.00 per hour. They got that money by engaging in extortion (of the leaders that they elected). Screw em. If they did not save and invest a lot of it, so that they will not starve, well to bad. Screw em. The punishment for stupidity is death. And apparently these civic "servants" were to stupid to realize that "if there ain't none, then no one gets any". News flash. Their ain't none, and no one wants to bail you out.
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