| Click for the Finfacts Ireland Portal Homepage |

Finfacts Business News Centre

   
Home 
 
 News
 Irish
 Irish Economy
 EU Economy
 US Economy
 UK Economy
 Global Economy
 International
 Property
 Innovation
 
 Analysis/Comment
 
 Asia Economy

RSS FEED


How to use our RSS feed

 
Web Finfacts

See Search Box lower down this column for searches of Finfacts news pages. Where there may be the odd special character missing from an older page, it's a problem that developed when Interactive Tools upgraded to a new content management system.

Welcome

Finfacts is Ireland's leading business information site and you are in its business news section.

We provide access to live business television and business related videos from: Bloomberg TV; The Wall Street Journal; CNBC and the Financial Times. Click image:

Links

Finfacts Homepage

Irish Share Prices

Euribor Daily Rates

Irish Economy

Global Income Per Capita

Global Cost of Living

Irish Tax 2008

Climate Change Reports

Global News

Bloomberg News

CNN Money

Cnet Tech News

Newspapers

Irish Independent

Irish Times

Irish Examiner

New York Times

Financial Times

Technology News

 

Feedback

 

Content Management by interactivetools.com.

Analysis/Comment Last Updated: Sep 21, 2009 - 8:55:51 AM


Dr. Peter Morici: Regulate bank pay
By Professor Peter Morici
Sep 21, 2009 - 3:00:44 AM

Email this article
 Printer friendly page

Peter Morici is an economist and professor at the Robert H. Smith School of Business at the University of Maryland. He is a recognized expert on international economics, industrial policy and macroeconomics. Prior to joining the university, he served as director of the Office of Economics at the US International Trade Commission during the Clinton Administration.

Dr. Peter Morici: Wall Street greed and irresponsibility have nearly destroyed the U.S. economy. Big bonuses for bankers encourage reckless risk taking and were a principal cause of the credit crisis and Great Recession. Pay must be regulated to avoid another calamity.

A generation ago, banks took deposits, made loans and collected payments. Bankers quickly felt the consequences of money lent to folks unlikely to repay.

During the 1980s, deregulation pushed up interest rates on deposits. Banks got caught with old mortgages on their books yielding less than they paid for deposits. The Savings and Loan Crisis resulted, motivating banks to sell new loans to investors instead of holding those in their portfolios.

Banks wrote mortgages and sold those to Wall Street financial institutions, who bundled loans into bonds and sold those to investors, such as insurance companies and foreign governments. Often, separate mortgage service companies collect payments and foreclose on delinquent loans.

From loan officers to the Wall Street bond salesmen, opportunities to exaggerate the quality of loans emerged. If local banks or Wall Street financial houses could pawn off high-risk, high-fee loans as reasonably safe, they enjoyed big paydays.

Wall Street bankers wrote bogus insurance policies called SWAPS that were supposed to limit losses for investors when mortgages defaulted. AIG wrote many SWAPS without capital to back them up, and banks even wrote SWAPS on each other’s mortgages—like two homeowners on a North Carolina beach promising to pay one another in the event of a hurricane.

The storm came, and AIG and several big banks became insolvent. Washington decided they were too big to fail and bailed them out.

Writing SWAPS and selling bad bonds to unwitting investors permitted bankers to earn huge profits and bonuses. When too many mortgages failed, investors and bank shareholders took enormous losses, and taxpayers bailed out the banks.

Apart from the TARP (the toxic assets rescue program launched in Sept 2008), the Federal Reserve and FDIC (US federal bank deposits guarantee agency) permitted banks to borrow at rock bottom interest rates and enjoy big profits to rebuild their capital. Consequently, widows relying on Certificates of Deposit for income now receive much reduced interest rates. That’s right—Ben Bernanke is taxing grandma to bail out Goldman Sachs.

Flush with profits, the banks are up to their old tricks—again creating highly engineered financial products, selling swaps, setting aside massive profits for bonuses, and manufacturing conditions for another crisis.

If Wall Street banks are too big fail, then they are too big to let go on with this irresponsible behavior.

French and German regulators advocate limits on bank compensation, and the Federal Reserve is considering prohibitions on compensation practices that encourage excessive risk taking. The latter is too complex to be realistic—the banks would run circles around such rules, much like lawyers creating tax shelters.

Better to limit bonuses and salaries of bankers to a fixed percentage of net income that aligns financial sector salaries with those of other industries.

Harsh for sure, but so is the pain bankers’ recklessness has imposed.

Bankers should not be allowed to pay themselves royally and put the nation at risk again.

Peter Morici,

Professor, Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland,

College Park, MD 20742-1815,

703 549 4338 Phone

703 618 4338 Cell Phone

pmorici@rhsmith.umd.edu

http://www.smith.umd.edu/lbpp/faculty/morici.html

http://www.smith.umd.edu/faculty/pmorici/cv_pmorici.htm

Related Articles


© Copyright 2007 by Finfacts.com

Top of Page

Analysis/Comment
Latest Headlines
Dr Peter Morici: Curb US trade deficit; Rev up oil to engineer more growth and jobs
Dr Peter Morici: Falling US unemployment hardly a game-changer but Obama may not need one
Dr Peter Morici: US jobs report expected to show little progress; Economy slowing
Dr Peter Morici: Rating downgrades; S&P got France right, Germany wrong
Dr. Peter Morici: Euro is a cruel hoax on Mediterranean nations
Peter Morici: Lacklustre US jobs report expected
Dr Peter Morici: Investors should be wary of buying US Treasuries
Dr Peter Morici: Occupy Wall Street put nation on notice
Dr. Peter Morici: US deficit talks; On the road to Armageddon
Dr Peter Morici: Obama outplays Republicans, Romney at home and on the road
Should Irish universities be trusted with additional fee income?
Dr. Peter Morici: Penn State’s Stain; Big time sports harm universities
Dr Peter Morici: US trade deficit blocks jobs creation and growth
Dr. Peter Morici: Don’t raise taxes or cut defense to solve US budget woes
Dr Peter Morici: Perry tax plan makes little sense
A comeback for Crony Ireland?: Millionaire lawyers oppose change in conservative country
Dr. Peter Morici: The Fed is out of tricks to jump start US housing and economy
Dr. Peter Morici: Free trade Is failing America
Ireland, FDI, and the difference between Aviva and TalkTalk
Dr. Peter Morici: When will President Obama put Americans’ jobs ahead of his own?
Dr. Peter Morici: Greece must default, dump euro
Dr Peter Morici: What President Obama needs to say and do
Dr Peter Morici: No time to panic - - this is not 2008 again
President Gay Byrne and the 'mad people' in Brussels running Ireland
Dr Peter Morici: Fixing markets and US economy must begin in the Oval Office
Dr Peter Morici: S&P downgrade will little affect interest rates or President Obama’s policies
Ireland Post-Bubble: RTÉ and conflict of interest; When the past is inoperative
Dr Peter Morici: Solutions to Slow US Growth: Develop domestic petroleum and address Chinese mercantilism
Dr. Peter Morici: US budget deficit; Republicans need new taxes, President Obama does not
Dr. Peter Morici: No US default, no shutdown inevitable if debt ceiling talks fail
The unforeseen consequences of voluntary debt reprofiling for Ireland
Dr. Peter Morici: The New Imperialism; EU aid package will destroy Greece and enrich Germany
Should corrupt Greece be ejected from Eurozone if it rejects reform?
Dr. Peter Morici: Greece should quit the euro and remark its debt
Ireland, waste incineration and gombeenism
Dr. Peter Morici: US trade deficit slows recovery, jobs creation
Dr. Peter Morici: Lessons from the Eurozone for the United States
Dr. Peter Morici: Lagarde makes sense for the IMF
Obama's message for Ireland and entrepreneurs of gloom: Is féidir linn
Dr. Peter Morici: Greece should restructure debt and abandon the euro + Video interview; France's Christine Lagarde