[ To the contrary, because of his
policies and particularly the bailouts which facilitated consummation of and even
greater frauds, the real economy, the nation, taxpayers will suffer a more
severe fate than even that obfuscated by bad policy in this election-year
expedience! ‘… When the last financial crisis began, the
‘Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke claims
that the Federal Reserve averted a second Great Depression by bailing out the
big Wall Street banks during the last financial crisis, and he says that if a
similar financial crisis comes along that the correct "policy
response" will be to do the exact same thing again. This was the
theme of the lecture that Bernanke delivered to students at
During his lecture to the students on
Tuesday, Bernanke stated the following....
"I
think the view is increasingly gaining acceptance that without the forceful
policy response that stabilized the financial system in 2008 and early 2009, we
could have had a much worse outcome in the economy."
So what did that "forceful
policy response" entail?
Well, on slide 24 of his presentation to the
students Bernanke tells us....
•
On October 10, 2008, G‐7 countries agreed to
work together to stabilize the
global financial
system. They agreed to
– prevent the failure of
systemically important
financial institutions
– ensure financial
institutions’ access to funding and
capital
– restore depositor confidence
– work to normalize credit
markets
Please note that not all financial
institutions got bailed out.
In fact, hundreds of small and
mid-size
It was only the "systemically
important financial institutions" that got bailed out.
So who decided which financial
institutions were important enough to be bailed out?
The Federal Reserve made those
decisions. There were no Congressional votes and no input from the
public. The Federal Reserve determined who the winners and the losers
would be in secret and without any public debate.
Sure sounds "democratic",
eh?
But we are told to trust them because they are supposedly the
experts.
So once the Federal Reserve bailed
out the "too big to fail" banks, what was the outcome?
On page 25 of his presentation to the students
Bernanke claimed that the bailouts successfully prevented the global financial
system from collapsing....
•
The international policy response averted the collapse of the global financial
system.
But it wasn't just big Wall Street
banks that got bailed out. Bernanke says that AIG was also bailed out
because the insurance company was deemed to be too "interconnected with
many other parts of the global financial system" to be allowed to fail....
Because
AIG was interconnected with many other parts of the global financial system,
its failure would have had a massive effect on other financial firms and
markets.
Once again, we see that it is the
Federal Reserve who picks the winners and the losers.
AIG got bailed out and was then able
to pay 100 cents on the dollar of what it owed to Goldman Sachs.
That sure worked out well for Goldman
Sachs.
In all, the Federal Reserve issued a
grand total of more than 16 trillion dollars in
secret loans during the financial crisis.
The big Wall Street banks got
showered with cash while hundreds of smaller banks were allowed to die like
dogs.
The fact that the Fed greatly favors
the big Wall Street banks has allowed them to grow massively in size and in
power.
Back in 1970, the 5 biggest
Today, the 5 biggest
The "too big to fail" banks
just keep getting bigger and bigger and bigger.
Yet during his
presentation to the students, Bernanke tried to talk out of both sides of
his mouth by claiming that it is not a good thing for some banks to be
"too big to fail"....
"But
clearly, it is something fundamentally wrong with a system in which some
companies are 'too big to fail.'"
So who is to blame for them being so
big?
Well, the Federal Reserve is probably
the biggest culprit.
Thanks Bernanke.
The big Wall Street banks are bigger
than ever and they are also more unstable than ever.
According to the Comptroller of the
Currency, the biggest
JPMorgan Chase - $70.1 Trillion
Citibank - $52.1 Trillion
Bank of
Goldman Sachs - $44.2 Trillion
So what is going to happen when that
bubble pops?
Is Bernanke going to zap tens of
trillions of dollars into existence to bail out that gigantic mess?
Meanwhile, the debt bubble that we
are all living in just keeps exploding in size.
Total student loan debt in the
The American people are not in better
financial condition than they were during the last financial crisis. In
fact, they are significantly worse off.
All over
And the
When the last financial crisis began,
the
Today, it has risen to 15.5 trillion dollars.
So Bernanke did not fix anything.
The best that can be said is that he
kicked the can down the road a little bit and made our long-term financial
problems a lot worse at the same time.
Bernanke can create money out of thin
air and loan it to his friends all he wants, but he is not going to be able to
prevent this house of cards from crashing down indefinitely.
So grab a bucket of popcorn and get
ready. The next few years are going to be fascinating to watch.