Daniel Howes Blog Forum

Jump to bottom
Sat. 10/24/09 10:32 AM

Why we NEED a Pecora

You walk in the door. A terrible stench attacks your sinuses. The sewer has backed up and flooded the place. And the maid is dusting pictures.

I read the analogy many years ago, and, while I forget the author's name and the precise context in which he wrote, the analogy strikes me as appropriate. The regulation of executive pay is equivalent to dusting the pictures.

Nevertheless, it is time to do something. And the something is a complete overhaul. And it will not be done without a political revolution.

It took a Pecora report to make the Securities Act of 1933 possible to put past the Senate of the time, and it will take something like it to get anything worthwhile past the Senate we have now, one wholly owned by the banks. The real breakdown in the Senate is not Republicans versus Democrats, but is bank-owned or not bank-owned. Who remembers alleged liberals Daschle and Biden assisting the 2005 Bankruptcy Reform and Consumer Protection (snort!) Act because the credit card issuers were in S. Dak and Delaware?

The real problem with executive pay is not that gaudy compensation offends little people. Little people really don't matter any more, as they have been shown to be easily manipulated (why else would an Alabama working stiff vote for a Shelby, or a Macomb-St. Clair area working stiff for a Miller?)

What is important is that the chase of Xanadu pay nearly led to the collapse of the economy as the so-called smart people kept selling soup (mortgage securities) into which they were simultaneously urinating (NINJA loans), and other so-called smart people kept buying it until the stench got too bad.

The chase had multiple bad consequences. First, the notion that the mortgages made highly desirable and marketable securities diverted credit from productive use to making a real estate bubble which briefly enriched real estate speculators and salespeople. Second, the collapse made the lenders into Twain's cat who sat on a hot stove.

So homeowners found their primary asset became much less valuable, or even valueless. But there was worse to come. There are Michigan businesses which have been destroyed because credit was made unavailable to them. Small companies had contracts with D3 companies, but couldn't get loans to be able to do the work until they got paid (the D3's slow pay practices didn't help much either). The workers they laid off, of course, stopped buying things, and, eventually, stopped making loan payments. The avalanche started, and as it continues downhill, it picks up more and more snow, whose mass increases not arithmetically, but geometrically ( a cube function).

The Keynesian solution is that the government has to provide demand when the private sector does not. And it must do that by taking (taxing) from the hoarded and getting it to those who will circulate it. This can be by direct payments, or by building roads, bridges, and weapons, or other government actions, including creating employment as soldiers, police, firefighters, teachers, and even bureaucrats. The hoarders, naturally, do not like this idea very much, and will fight to keep what they have. And they fight by buying portions of the government. The cheapest effective things to buy are Senators from small states, especially ones who don't even know they've been bought, bacause they actually think what they do are good things. Thus the Senate is full of Hatches, Conrads, Baucuses, Shelbys, and the like.

While I have digressed a bit (well, OK, a lot), I return to the point that a Pecora is necessary to provide the necessary explosion to break loose the resistance of the Senators who belong to the banks, just as dynamite was essential to make possible tunneling through rock, and, thereby, such things as transcontinental railways and the Panama and Suez canals. America's threatened middle class needs a new Pecora to counter the upper class's Becks and Limbaughs.

Actually, attacks on executive pay are just the battles the owners of America want to fight, because on these they can make arguments which appear attractive to the working stiffs who are, still, the majority of the voters. They can argue that such is the first step on the slippery slope away from freedom. What they don't want to talk about is the freedom the owners take from others by the erection of barriers to entry. They also do not want to start debates about the constraints on ruthless capitalism that such icons of conservatism as Adam Smith and Edmund Burke called required by Natural Law.

The history of the 20s and 30s is important not only to read of the FDRs and Pecoras, but also of what daily life was like for working stiffs. It was not a time of suburban homes, two or more SUVs in the driveway, cable TV and internet. It was a time when having one's own washing machine was a rare thing, and when electricity was not available in much of rural America. The unions of which you now write so disparagingly were necessary to the creation of a middle class. Unfortunately, they, too, have become perverted versions of what they once were. Gettlefinger is to Reuther as Clinton is to FDR, or, even, as Dubya is to Eisenhower.

Dan, you are too smart to think that Wall Street is not predatory. The country needs to be protected from it. But one needs to be smart about it. We do not want to create the equivalent of Robert Sheckley's fictional "Watchbirds" (http://www.mastersofscifi.com/site/masters_of_science_fiction/episodes/watchbird.html)(The short story is well worth reading, if you haven't yet)

Jump to top

Advertisement

About this Weblog

Business | The Economy | Politics

Daniel Howes' column runs Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays.

Click here for his latest column and archive

You can reach him at (313) 222-2106 or email him at dchowes@detnews.com.

Daniel Howes is business columnist and associate business editor of The Detroit News. From 1999 to January 2003, he was based in Germany as The News' European correspondent and automotive columnist, reporting from more than 20 countries on three continents. Before heading to Europe, Howes was senior automotive writer and an investigative and projects reporter on the business desk. He came to Detroit in 1993 from The Roanoke Times in Virginia, where he covered business, politics and higher education.

More on Daniel Howes

  • On media: He is a regular contributor to the Paul W. Smith Show on NewsTalk 760-WJR in Detroit. He appears often on radio and television locally, in the United States and overseas.
  • On education: He holds a bachelor's degree in history from the College of Wooster in Ohio, and a master's in international affairs from Columbia University.
  • On awards: Winner of multiple International Wheel Awards for column writing; a four-time winner of Northwestern University's Medill award for general markets coverage; and a three-time finalist for the prestigious Gerald Loeb Awards, including an honorable mention for commentary in 2007.

Resources

Blog Roll

About this forum

Acceptable Use

The Detroit News does not tolerate offensive language in its forums. Once you register, your posts go up automatically, but we kill offensive posts that are brought to our attention. Users who violate our acceptable use policy can and will be denied access. See a problem? Tell us.

Feedback

We value your feedback, so please let us know if you have any questions or problems.

Threading in forums

We are working on adding threading to the forums. Clicking on the headline of a post will now get you related posts in a few different ways.

- If the post was sent to us in response to an article, clicking on that post's headline will retrieve all comments on that article, and clicking on the "See related article" link will send you to the article itself.

- If the comment was submitted in response to a cybersurvey, clicking on the headline will take you to the cybersurvey and its related comments.

- If you click on the headline of a forum post that was simply posted in the forum, you will get all posts with that same headline.

If you want to add a comment to a thread in the forum, use the same headline as the post to which you want to respond.

If you find a problem, please tell us, and thanks in advance for your patience as we work to improve the forums for you.