Banks Profit on Handouts

Posted: October 26th, 2009 | Author: Gabriella | Filed under: In the News | Tags: , | No Comments »

Dean Baker, Director for the Center for Economic and Policy Research, and contributor to Mandate for Change, discusses the past bailout and CEO profiting with The New York Post.

The Washington-based Center for Economic and Policy Research calculated that the below-market rates offered by the Federal Reserve to JPMorgan Chase — and 17 other large banks — accounted for 41 percent of the profits at Dimon’s banks.

They accounted for 47 percent of the profit at Bank of America, the group said.

A report by the CEPR compared the rates the Fed charged large banks to the rates it charged smaller banks.

The difference amounted to $300 for each of the 120 million families in the country — or roughly $34 billion.

“Most people, if you asked them what do you want to do with $300, I doubt the answer would be, ‘Why don’t we subsidize the large banks?’” said Dean Baker, the group’s co-director. “A lot of things we think are important cost much less — $30 billion annually would go a long way to subsidizing health care [costs for American families].”

Click here to read the article.


The Cost of Saving These Whales

Posted: October 5th, 2009 | Author: Gabriella | Filed under: In the News | Tags: , | No Comments »

Dean Baker, director for the Center for Economic and Policy Research, and contributing author to Mandate for Change discusses his new study on the cost of saving U.S. banks with The New York Times.

Dean Baker, an economist and co-director of the center, and Travis McArthur, a research intern, analyzed banks’ costs of money to compare the interest rate that smaller banks pay to attract deposits and borrow funds with the rate paid by behemoths perceived as too big to fail.

Using data from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Mr. Baker’s study found that the spread between the average cost at smaller banks and at larger institutions widened significantly after March 2008, when the United States government brokered the Bear Stearns rescue.

From the beginning of 2000 through the fourth quarter of 2007, the cost of funds for small institutions averaged 0.29 percentage point more than that of banks with $100 billion or more in assets. But from late 2008 through June 2009, when bailouts for large institutions became expected, this spread widened to an average of 0.78 percentage point.

At that level, Mr. Baker calculated, the total taxpayer subsidy for the 18 large bank holding companies was $34.1 billion a year.

Mr. Baker is the first to note that the expanding gap may not be attributable solely to the too-big-to-fail policy. Banks’ cost of money has risen during other times of economic uncertainty, like the recession of 2001. After that downturn, the cost-of-funds spread between small and large banks rose to 0.69 percentage point.

Given that increase, Mr. Baker said, one could calculate a more conservative assessment of the too-big-to-fail subsidy. Using the difference between the spread during the last recession and the current figure, which is 0.09 percentage point, the annual subsidy for the large banks reached $6.3 billion.

Mr. Baker says it is important to continue measuring this difference in costs to see whether the subsidy disappears or whether it is a continuing transfer of income. If the spread vanishes, it could indicate that rock-bottom interest rates and excessive market turbulence were responsible for the wide gap.

“Recognizing that you can’t have a definitive answer to this, it is important to understand there is real money at stake,” he said. “There is a subsidy here, and we either have to say we are going to break up the banks and get rid of the subsidy, or if we don’t do that, then we have to be confident that we have put in enough regulation to offset the subsidy.”

Such offsets could include higher capital requirements for large institutions or restrictions on assets that banks are allowed to hold, Mr. Baker said. You can be sure that financial institutions would object strenuously to any such changes — after all, they have little to lose when their own failure isn’t an option.

If Mr. Baker is correct about the estimated size of the subsidy, the costs of too-big-to-fail are substantial when compared with other government programs. At $34.1 billion a year, the subsidy is more than twice the grant given under Temporary Assistance to Needy Families, a $16.5 billion program that helps recipients move from welfare to work. A $6.3 billion subsidy would be roughly what the government spent in 2008 on the Global Health and Child Survival program, an initiative aimed at preventing malaria, AIDS and tuberculosis.

The subsidy also looms large when compared with bank profits. Mr. Baker’s estimate of $34.1 billion would be equal to almost 50 percent of projected profits this year at the 18 largest institutions. The $6.3 billion estimate would amount to 9.1 percent of expected earnings.

Click here to read the article.


Dean Baker discusses the GM bailout

Posted: June 10th, 2009 | Author: DanielAtzmon | Filed under: In the News | Tags: , , | No Comments »

Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research and contributing author to Mandate for Change, weighs in on the Obama administration’s plan for General Motors.

The Obama administration’s plan for General Motors is a serious effort to try to make the best of a really awful situation.

In the current economic climate, sitting back and allowing GM to be liquidated was not a serious option. This would have wiped out a whole network of suppliers and ancillary businesses in Michigan, Ohio and Indiana, devastating the economies of these three states.

Click here to read the article.


Bailed-out banks make monopoly play for derivatives

Posted: March 30th, 2009 | Author: Alex | Filed under: In the News | Tags: , , , | No Comments »

Co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research and contributing author to Mandate for Change, Dean Baker, was quoted in an article from the Associated Press about how several banks that have received federal bailout money are seeking to gain control over of an even larger share of the multi-billion dollar derivatives market.

“You’d think these people (at the banks) would be humbled and just hope they don’t end up in jail,” said Dean Baker. “They don’t have any qualms about going to Congress and saying what they want … and they’re still in a position to get a lot of things.”

To read more, click here.


Obama Restrictions on CEO Pay Signal Progress, But Tougher Limits Needed

Posted: February 5th, 2009 | Author: Steven | Filed under: Press Release | Tags: , , | No Comments »

Mandate authors, and compensation experts with the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS), Sarah Anderson, Sam Pizzigati, and Chuck Collins yesterday called President Barack Obama’s $500,000 cap on executive pay at some bailed-out companies a “small, but very welcome first step toward ending excessive executive compensation.”

“After 30 years of escalating CEO pay, we finally have a President who has taken a concrete step toward limiting the dollars that are cascading into executive suites,” notes Sarah Anderson, the lead author of Executive Excess, the annual Institute report that tracks the gap between CEO and worker pay. “But given the level of public outrage over the Wall Street bonus bonanza, the administration should have gone much further to stop bailout profiteering.”

The key shortcoming of the administration plan is that the $500,000 pay cap will apply to only a handful of firms getting “exceptional assistance.” In recent news reports, administration sources have argued that troubled banks would chose not to accept government assistance if broader pay restrictions were imposed, for fear of losing key personnel.

IPS staff argues that a better approach is offered by Senator McCaskill (D-MO) who today pushed a stronger approach, introducing a bill as amendment to the stimulus package that would cap executive pay in bailed-out firms at no more than $400,000 — the salary of the President of the United States.

Click here for a more detailed analysis of the McCaskill bill and the executive pay provisions in the TARP reform bill recently approved by the House.


Bailout has Little Affect on Fat Cats

Posted: January 28th, 2009 | Author: ErikLeaver | Filed under: In the News | Tags: , , | No Comments »

Mandate author, Sarah Anderson was quoted in the Washington Post article, “Wall Street Bonuses Draw Scrutiny in Bailout’s Wake

“We’ve waited a long time for the shame factor to have any kind of impact, and that’s why I really wish Congress would put more stringent restrictions on the bailout money,” said Sarah Anderson, who has written extensively on compensation issues for the Institute for Policy Studies, a progressive Washington think tank.