"The ONLY reason the system is still functioning with all its bad debt and fraud and corruption is that the balls are being juggled and accounts not settled -- Obama and the Congress want to keep the balls in the air so there can be no accounting."
Wall
Street Bets a Quadrillion of Everybody Else’s Money
“Even
if the whole planet were offered as collateral, it could not cover
Wall Street’s bets.”
By
Glen Ford
11
October, 2013
October
11, 2013 "Information Clearing House - The clock is ticking, we
are told, on the “good faith and credit” of the United States
government, which might technically be unable to pay its bills after
October 17 if the two corporate parties don’t make a deal on the
debt limit. Congressional Republicans and the White House are
“playing Russian roulette with the global economy,” says an
editorial in the Dallas Morning News, warning of impending “economic
Armageddon” as financial markets “crater,” the economy stalls
and interest on future federal borrowing skyrockets.
Given
that capitalism has entered a terminal stage of acute and escalating
crises, the Dallas editorialists may be right; anything could set off
another spasm of financial mayhem in a system that is ever more
unstable. However, it is the “markets” – a euphemism for the
financial capitalist class – that are the ultimate source of
instability, the folks who play Russian roulette 24-7 and have
dragged humanity to a place where an actual Armageddon is only a
twirl of the chamber away. In this game, everybody’s head is in
play.
It
is proper that the corporate press speak of the impending fiscal
threat – a minor one, in the maelstrom of crises that beset the
system – in gambling terms. An increase of interest rates by a few
basis points (fractions of a percent) on trillions of borrowed
dollars amounts to quite a chunk of public money, to be paid directly
into the accounts of these very same private “markets” that are
supposedly biting their nails with anxiety over the budget. The
Dallas Morning News and its fellow corporate propaganda spores spread
the myth that the “markets” (bankers, hedge funds, etc.) crave
stability, when the vital statistics of the real world of finance
capitalism scream the opposite.
The
Lords of Capital (the “markets”) are pure gamblers who have
transformed the global financial marketplace into a machinery of
perpetual uncertainty, in which all the wealth of the world is bet
many times over by people who don’t actually own it, in a casino
whose operators scheme against each other as well as their patrons,
most of whom are not even aware that they are in the game – much
less, that it is Russian roulette.
“Derivatives
are valued at six times more than the total accumulated wealth of the
world.”
The
notional value of derivative financial instruments is now estimated
at $1.2 quadrillion – that is, one thousand two hundred trillion
dollars. This statistic is fantastic in every sense of the word,
amounting to 16.7 times the Gross World Product, which is the value
of all the goods and services produced per year by every man, woman
and child on the planet: $71.83 trillion. Derivatives are valued at
six times more than the total accumulated wealth of the world,
including all global stock markets, insurance funds, and family
wealth: $200 trillion.
The
great bulk of known derivative deals are held by banks that are
considered too big to be allowed to fail, with the top four banks
accounting for more than 90 percent of the exposure: J.P. Morgan
Chase, Citibank, Bank of America, and Goldman Sachs.
We
are told that derivatives are simply bets between knowledgeable
partners – hedges against loss – and that every time one of these
financial institutions loses, another gains, so that there is no net
loss or threat of global collapse. But that’s a lie. Never in the
history of the world has finance capital so dominated the real
economy, and only in the past two decades have derivatives been so
central to finance capitalism. The players do not know what they are
doing, nor do they care. The meltdown of 2008 was caused primarily by
derivatives, requiring a bailout in the tens of trillions of dollars
that is still ongoing, with the Federal Reserve buying up securities
that no one would purchase – that is, bet on – otherwise. Yet,
the universe of derivatives deals has grown much larger than in 2008,
effectively untouched by President Obama’s so-called financial
reforms.
The
casino has swallowed the system. The sums the players are betting are
not only far larger than the value of the rest of their portfolios,
but six times larger than the combined assets of every human
institution and family on Earth, and almost 17 times bigger than the
worth of humankind’s yearly output. Even if the whole planet were
offered as collateral, it could not cover Wall Street’s bets.
“Detroit
has been rendered a failed city by the full range of derivatives and
securitization.”
The
events of 2008 demonstrated that derivatives collapses, like other
speculative financial events, behave as cascades of consequences,
rather than orderly “resolutions.” Derivatives deals infest or
overhang every nook and cranny of the U.S. and other “mature”
economies, poisoning pension systems and municipal finance
structures. Detroit has been rendered a failed city by the full range
of derivatives and securitization. When the casino is the economy,
everyone is forced to play, and the poor go broke first.
Reformers
of various stripes tell us that derivatives can either be regulated
to a less lethal scale or abolished, altogether, while leaving Wall
Street otherwise intact. That’s manifestly untrue. Finance capital
creates nothing, reproducing itself through the manipulation of
money. The derivatives explosion occurred because Wall Street needed
a form of “fictitious” capital to continue posting ever higher
profits, and ultimately, fictitious portfolios full of tradable bets.
Derivatives deals are the ultimate expression of financial
capitalism: they are primarily bets on transactions, rather than
investments in production. The rise of derivatives signals that
capitalism has run its course, and can only do further harm to
humanity. The derivatives economy – all $1.2 quadrillion of it –
is the last stage of capitalism.
If
the Occupy Wall Street movement had understood this, and articulated
the necessity to overthrow and abolish Wall Street, its impact would
have been far more profound. As it stands, Americans are directed to
quake in fear as the clock ticks down to some technical federal
budgetary deadline on October 17 – as if that’s the sword of
Damocles hanging over the world.
BAR
executive editor Glen Ford can be contacted at
Glen.Ford@BlackAgendaReport.com. - http://www.blackagendareport.com
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