For What It's Worth
Our Casino Economy: What the Public Understands... and What It Can't
By Kenneth Eisold
Tue, 27 Oct 2009 16:44:45 GMT
Some defects in our financial system are easy to grasp. Paying excessive salaries and bonuses to those who made disastrous mistakes is something the public understands very well. Being deemed "too big to fail" is also pretty obvious, as it entitles some firms to unearned insurance at taxpayer expense. But how to cure the excesses that produced our financial meltdown... that's another matter.In Sunday's New York Times, Gretchen Morgenson noted ("Wall Street Follies: The Next Act") that according to some acute observers, Washington's moves to cut executive pay was "tinkering around the edges and did nothing to prevent another disaster." She added:
"[It] looks like a way for the government to reassure an angry public that they are making genuine changes. But compensation is a trifling matter compared to, say, true reform of derivatives trading."She quoted Michael Greenberger, a law professor at the University of Maryland:
"In essence, the compensation problems, as bad as they are, are a sideshow to the casino-like nature of the economy as it existed."We all understand bigness and unfair competition, or greed and exploitation. But what about derivatives and credit default swaps? How many of us understand asset pricing and the risks of leveraging? The risks were taken with our money, but most of us don't really understand what happened. And in the absence of public understanding and pressure for change, change is not likely.
Morgenson went on to quote Neil Barofsky, special inspector general of Treasury's Troubled Asset Relief Program. Asked on CNN last week about changes that could prevent another financial disaster, he said he saw things moving in the other direction:
" 'These banks that were too big to fail, are now bigger. Government has sponsored and supported several mergers that made them larger…. The idea that the government is not going to let these banks fail, which was implicit a year ago, it's now explicit.' "As a result, he concluded: "Potentially, we could be in more danger now than we were a year ago."
So who is trying to convey to the public the "casino-like nature of the economy"? I don't think we all need to understand what a derivative actually is, but we need some concepts and metaphors to bring home to us what we don't know about the extravagant risks the high-flyers took with our money. "Casino" might be a good place to start.
Does the American public know enough about what caused last year's financial meltdown? Do you know what a credit default swap is? Let us know.
-- Ken Eisold, Ph.D., is a practicing psychoanalyst and organizational consultant. He has served as president of the International Society for the Psychoanalytic Study of Organizations and as a director of the Organizational Program at the William Alanson White Institute, which he helped to found. For several years he directed the A. K. Rice Institute's National Conference on Leadership and Authority. He lives and works in New York City. For more information visit KenEisold.com.
Editor's Note: This post originally appeared Oct. 26 at KenEisold.com. The opinions expressed are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Comcast.
Message Edited by Kenneth_Eisold on 10-27-2009 12:46 PM




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If you really want to fix failed companies then fire all their top executives and replace them with executives that will work 10 hour days and keep their hands on the pulse of the company. You cannot run your company from the Golf course. All the good executives unfortunately are dead or retired.Believe me I am a retired C.E.O and there is no longer leadership, loyalty or integrity in this country at the top.
Wed, 28 Oct 2009 16:46:50 GMT | semper1
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How true this is someone who wrote this speaks the truthTHANK YOU
Wed, 28 Oct 2009 18:52:09 GMT | justmorebull
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Honor and integrity are long gone from the American business world and the American culture. I think our problems started with the advent of the credit card. Since then people have become used to spending money they do not have - but that they felt entitled to or, for some reason I could never comprehend, that they deserved. Now families are deep in debt, businesses are overleveraged and our state and Federal government are underwater. Business ethics have been lost in an effort to one-up the other guy and if you can sell something of little or no value for another's hard-earned dollars - then go fot it. What happened to an honest day's work for an honest dollar? Obama can print all the money he wishes - it will only worsen our problems. As a society we need to return to old valuesc where people save for something before buying it; where people care about each other; where people don't look to the government to solve their problems. As Reagan put it - government is the problem. Our Founding Fathers never intended a government that took away our rights and directed our every move -- nor one that will be taxing us at a rate that made George III seem kind and gentle. Semper 1 writes that there is no leadership at the top - but many of us are too blame for this condition because we keep electing people not interested in leading us in our own best interests but leading us in a direction that serves their own self-interests. I have never been a quitter but have to say that at 60 years of age I am slowly becoming so frustrated with this country that I feel like crawling into a hole and giving up. **bleep** shame - America had a great thing going.Fri, 30 Oct 2009 03:20:43 GMT | sheridan
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You nailed it on the head! Very well said. The Leadership of this country is the root of all the financial failures--not corporate America or Wall Street. Allowing people to quote qualify for mortgages, for example, who have no way of repaying them...sets that person up for failure. It was not privatized Banks, or Main Street Brokers that established such polices and minimum requirements to Mortgage Banks or else penalties--yes, it was our government. My concern is that the general public may be only listening to mainstream media and not really seeking the truth.Sat, 31 Oct 2009 14:25:28 GMT | TRUTH_IS
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Wealth not backed up by substance of worth? An economy with no sense of economy in it? Generations raised with attitudes of "entitlement" by baby boomers with poor parenting skills and even fewer emotional ones? Self discipline, accountability, responsibility and sense are all personal and individual responsibilities. If "we" individually do not possess any of these skills, then by what semblance of logic and reason do we think any group of us would? Be that group a government or a business or any other organization, the whole cannot exceed the sum of all its parts. What do "I" think? I don't think many of us think at all. I think most of us surrendered that responsibility over to others and are now whining about the consequences of that decision.Wed, 04 Nov 2009 16:53:52 GMT | Sue_Ann_Edwards
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Just ANOTHER reason to move to Canada!Sat, 07 Nov 2009 22:42:30 GMT | OMNIDE