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Robert Reich
NationofChange / Op-Ed
Published: Friday 19 October 2012
“Mitt Romney, private equity manager and financier — well within the top one-tenth of 1 percent, collecting more than $20 million a year yet paying 14 percent in taxes because of tax preferences for capital gains and for private-equity — is the avatar for all that’s happened.”

How Obama Can Smoke Out Mitt: Call for Breaking Up the Biggest Banks, and Resurrecting Glass-Steagall

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President Obama should propose that the nation’s biggest banks be broken up and their size capped, and that the Glass-Steagall Act be resurrected. 

It’s good policy, and it would smoke out Mitt Romney as being of, by, and for Wall Street — and not on the side of average Americans. 

It would also remind America that five years ago Wall Street’s excesses almost ruined the economy. Bankers, hedge-fund managers, and private-equity traders speculated on the upside, then shorted on the downside — in a vast zero-sum game that resulted in the largest transfer of wealth from average Americans to financial elites ever witnessed in this nation’s history. 

Most of us lost big — including over $7 trillion of home values, a $700-billion-dollar bailout of Wall Street, and continuing high unemployment.

But the top 1 percent have done just fine. In the first year of the recovery they reaped 93 percent of the gains. The latest data show them back with 20 to 25 percent of the nation’s total income — just where they were in 2007.

The stock market has about caught up to where it was before the crash. The pay and bonuses on the Street are once again sky-high. So are the pay and perks of top corporate executives. The Forbes list of richest Americans contains more billionaires than ever. 

And the tax rates of the top 1 percent are lower than ever — courtesy of their armies of lobbyists.

Mitt Romney, private equity manager and financier — well within the top one-tenth of 1 percent, collecting more than $20 million a year yet paying 14 percent in taxes because of tax preferences for capital gains and for private-equity — is the avatar for all that’s happened.

Just like the rest of the Street, Romney used other peoples’ money to make big bets, leveraging like mad, pumping and then dumping companies regardless of the human costs. 

Worse, Romney wants to cut taxes even further on the top 1 percent — giving them them lion’s share of a $4.7 trillion tax cut — while shredding safety nets the rest of us rely on. 

And he wants to repeal the Dodd-Frank Act that goes some way to preventing the worst excesses of the Street. 

And this man has an almost 50-50 chance of becoming president? 

The President should counter Romney’s extraordinary solicitude toward the Street with a proposal to cap the size of the nation’s biggest banks so that no bank is ever again too big to fail. And to resurrect the Glass-Steagall Act, which once separated commercial from investment banking.

In the 1980s the ten biggest banks had less than 30 percent of bank depositary assets. Now they have 54 percent. And the four biggest now dominate the Street almost completely. Because lenders and investors know they’re too big to fail, the four biggest banks have a competitive advantage over smaller rivals that pose larger financial risks. That means they’ll only get bigger. 

Breaking up the biggest banks and capping the size of all banks is hardly a radical suggestion these days. The Dallas Federal Reserve Board, which has never been accused of excessive liberalism, has called for it. So has Sanford Weill, the creator of Citigroup, one of the biggest of the big. So has Daniel Tarullo, the Federal Reserve governor charged with bank regulation. So have conservative commentators such as George Will. 

It’s not too late for the President to advocate these measures. In fact, now may be the perfect time. Besides, it’s not as if Wall Street is going to pour campaign contributions into Obama’s coffers anyway; the Street is going with Mitt.

Calling for a breakup of the biggest banks and a resurrection of Glass Steagall would smoke out Mitt Romney — revealing clearly and decisively he’s not on the side of most Americans. 

This article was originally posted on Robert Reich's blog.



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ABOUT Robert Reich

 

ROBERT B. REICH, one of the nation’s leading experts on work and the economy, is Chancellor’s Professor of Public Policy at the Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He has served in three national administrations, most recently as secretary of labor under President Bill Clinton. Time Magazine has named him one of the ten most effective cabinet secretaries of the last century. He has written thirteen books, including his latest best-seller, “Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future;” “The Work of Nations,” which has been translated into 22 languages; and his newest, an e-book, “Beyond Outrage.” His syndicated columns, television appearances, and public radio commentaries reach millions of people each week. He is also a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine, and Chairman of the citizen’s group Common Cause. His widely-read blog can be found at www.robertreich.org.

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9 comments on "How Obama Can Smoke Out Mitt: Call for Breaking Up the Biggest Banks, and Resurrecting Glass-Steagall"

photodoc

October 21, 2012 7:57am

Excellent article, Robert.

And, let us all remember that Romney is the cheerleader for some of the most dangerous terrorists in the world-- the psychopathic fossil fuel industry CEOs who poison our air and water, rape our land, and make the planet less habitable each day, regardless of how this affects their own children and grandchildren, let alone OURS. These horrible excuses for human beings have gamed the system so they can commit the most heinous crimes, and stay out of prison. Fines mean nothing to these creeps-- just a cost of doing business. THAT'S how skewed out country is right now. And Romney has a 50-50 chance of being elected? This is due only to the incredible ignorance of the American public-- much the cause of the Koch brothers and others who keep knowledge out of the mainstream media, and who contribute tens of millions of dollars to promote fake "science."

As one who photographs the scarred landscapes and devastated human victims of the coal and natural gas industries, I'm not thrilled with President Obama's policies, but at least he's moving in the right direction. Romney? Another Dick Cheney (who should also be in prison) in that regard. Please, Robert, if you can also help expose Romney in this realm, you will be doing an even greater service.

Keep up the great work!

Rich Nau

October 19, 2012 6:31pm

Excellent.
This might also reverse the trend in increasing bank fees.

gromoh

October 19, 2012 12:43pm

I was thinking about Romney the astute business man who banks out of the country so he won't have to pay as much in taxes. First if he loves the country so much that he wants to be its president, why hide income and secondly he wants to stop supporting programs like Big Bird. Does he know how many jobs are behnd Big Bird and Sesame Street besides the few actors that portray the characters? I see producers, graphic artists, engineers, mechanics, carpenters, electricians, set designers painters, sewers, cleaners, janitors etc. etc. etc. So I am really wondering how many underlings actually do the thinking for him in all of his business ventures. I don't think it comes naturally to him and I don't really think he sees how jobs are created. Theater productions and entertainment such as the circus, musical productions, stage productions of any kind, create jobs, each one creating hundreds of jobs.

BozoAdult

October 19, 2012 12:23pm

The American people would be behind restoring Glass-Steagal.

I doubt it could ever be accomplished with this corporate run legislature. But if Obama would even give it lip service it could help his cause.

tabitha

October 19, 2012 11:48am

The President cannot do everything on his own. He cannot fight Romney and the Republicans alone, he needs all of you journalists to help him expose these scary people. Honestly I am afraid for the President and as much as I think the world needs him to lead, I want him to be safe as I am sure all peace loving people do. Can somebody remind these greedy raiders that they can't take any of the billions with them?
It is not too late to educate voters, especially the knuckleheads who have still not decided and need three debates to do so? Romney is one scary dude and the more I learn about him, coupled with that glare on his face during the exchange about Libya, the more afraid I become. This guy wants to be President so bad and this is the closest he has come with only one man standing in his way? God help us all.

woetopoe

October 19, 2012 11:14am

Perhaps the President should consult Jamie Dimon, who some reports suggest could become treasury secretary in a 2nd Obama term, for advice on how to handle the big financial institutions. Remember Professor Reich..."we look forward, not back."

jussmartenuf's picture
jussmartenuf

October 19, 2012 9:41am

Nail Romney --
Time to make civil, GLBT, rights center stage. Each citizen has "inalienable" rights to the pursuit of happiness. Romney has stated he wants a constitutional amendment to prevent Gay marriage which is unconstitutional as it denies this inalienable right to any Gay person who wants to pursue happiness through marriage to the person they love.
Further, he always talks about states rights yet an amendment would deny even states the right of choice. Highly unconstitutional.
Nail the hypocritical bum on this. Why is everyone afraid to discuss getting on the right side of history on this issue?

Robert S. Becker

October 19, 2012 9:36am

Dream on, Prof. Reich:

That would involve Obama doing two things he avoids at all cost: 1) take a clear, strong stand that could change the system and 2) inciting the reactionary banksters to switch from calling him a "socialist" to an outright commie. And calling for a restoration of Glass-Stiegal would violate a legacy "achievement" from his best cheerleader, Bubba Clinton.

janmb

October 19, 2012 1:07pm

Glass Stealgal --- -IT wasn't a complete deregulation at all. We still had heavy regulations and insurance on bank deposits, requirements on banks for capital and for disclosure. When I signed that repeal, ( if you go back and read the bill,) it gave the government clear authority to watch the new [banking] entities. But the main thing that the banks got out of that was the ability to underwrite insurance, because various rulings even before I took office had virtually abolished the traditional dividing line between investment and commercial banks. The key was preventing either side from becoming over-leveraged, which required regulatory oversight, which was missing. Quote from Bill Clinton---
But the republicans don't like regulations especially the Koch Bothers Industries who stole oil from federal lands, rigged prices with competitors, paid bribes to win contracts in six countries, sold oil equipment to Iran despite a U.S. ban, brothers Charles and David Koch have relentlessly pushed for less government regulation cause they have been charged with releasing tons of cancer-causing benzene into the atmosphere and have had five criminal convictions in the U.S. and Canada.....