Opinion: Break up the banks
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Giant Wall Street banks continue to threaten the wellbeing of millions of Americans, but what to do?
Bernie Sanders says break them up and resurrect the Glass-Steagall Act that once separated investment from commercial banking.
Hillary Clinton says charge them a bit more and oversee them more carefully.
Most Republicans say don鈥檛 worry.
Clearly, there鈥檚 reason聽to worry. Back in 2000, before they almost ruined the economy and had to be bailed out, the five biggest banks on Wall Street held聽聽of the nation鈥檚 banking assets. Now they hold more than聽.
Their huge size fuels further growth because they鈥檒l be bailed out if they get into trouble again.
This hidden federal guarantee against failure is estimated be worth over聽a year to the big banks. In effect, it鈥檚 a subsidy from the rest of us to the bankers.
And they鈥檒l almost certainly get into trouble again if nothing dramatic is done to stop them. Consider their behavior since they were bailed out.
In 2012 JPMorgan Chase, the largest bank on Street, lost $6.2 billion betting on credit default swaps tied to corporate debt 鈥 and then publicly lied about the losses. It later came out that the bank paid illegal bribes to get the business in the first place.
Last May the Justice Department announced a settlement of the biggest criminal price-fixing conspiracy in modern history, in which the biggest banks manipulated the $5.3 trillion-a-day currency market in a 鈥渂razen display of collusion,鈥澛燗ttorney General Loretta Lynch.
Wall Street is on the road to another crisis.聽
This would take a huge toll. Although the banks have repaid the billions we lent them in 2008, many Americans are still living with the collateral damage from what occurred 鈥 lost jobs, savings, and homes.
But rather than prevent this by breaking up the big banks and resurrecting Glass-Steagall, Hillary Clinton is taking a more cautious approach.
She wants to impose extra fees on the banks, with the amounts turning not on the bank鈥檚 size but how much it depends on short-term funding (such as fast-moving capital markets), which is a way of assessing riskiness.
So a giant bank that relies mainly on bank deposits wouldn鈥檛 be charged.
Clinton would also give bank regulators more power than they have under the Dodd-Frank Act (passed in the wake of the last banking crisis) to break up any particular bank that they consider too risky.
And she wants more oversight of so-called 鈥渟hadow鈥 banks 鈥 pools of money (like money market mutual funds, hedge funds, and insurance funds) that act like banks.
All this makes sense. And in a world where the giant Wall Street banks didn鈥檛 have huge political power, these measures might be enough.
But, if you hadn鈥檛 noticed, Wall Street鈥檚 investment bankers, key traders, top executives, and hedge-fund and private-equity managers wield extraordinary power.聽
They鈥檙e major sources of campaign contributions to both parties.
In addition, a lucrative revolving door connects the Street to Washington. Treasury secretaries and their staffs move nimbly from and to the Street, regardless of who鈥檚 in the Oval Office.
Key members of Congress, especially those involved with enacting financial laws or overseeing financial regulators, have fat paychecks waiting for them on Wall Street when they retire.
Which helps explain why no Wall Street executive has been indicted for the fraudulent behavior that led up to the 2008 crash. Or for the criminal price-fixing scheme settled in May. Or for other excesses since then.
And why even the fines imposed on the banks have been only a fraction of the banks鈥 potential gains.
And also why Dodd-Frank has been watered down into vapidity.
For example, it requires major banks to prepare 鈥渓iving wills鈥 describing how they鈥檇 unwind their operations if they get into serious trouble.
But no big bank has come up with one that passes muster. Federal investigators have found them all 鈥渦nrealistic.鈥
That鈥檚 not surprising because if they were realistic, the banks would effectively lose their hidden 鈥渢oo-big-to-fail鈥 subsidies.
Given all this, Hillary Clinton鈥檚 proposals would only invite more dilution and finagle.
The only way to contain the Street鈥檚 excesses is with reforms so big, bold, and public they can鈥檛 be watered down 鈥 busting up the biggest banks and resurrecting Glass-Steagall. 聽