Sunday, February 15, 2009

have spent fortunes on lobbying efforts and campaign contributions, purchasing access, good will and clout.

TO BE NOTED:From the FT:

Bank Recovery Stalls on Donations to Congress: Michael R. Sesit

Commentary by Michael R. Sesit


Feb. 13 (Bloomberg) -- As with the treatment of most crises, the one afflicting U.S. banks has an emergency-room phase and a long-term convalescence stage.

In the short run, President Barack Obama’s administration is rushing to resuscitate the U.S. banking industry with cash infusions, guarantees, a fund to purchase banks’ illiquid assets and an initiative to foster new consumer and business loans. The strategy may or may not work.

One thing is certain: The long-term goals of altering how banks are managed and redesigning the U.S. regulatory structure are doomed unless changes are made to laws on political-campaign contributions. Lawmakers must stop the flow of money greasing the incestuous links that the financial-services industry has with Congress and the executive branch.

Finance companies -- commercial and investment banks, insurers, investment-management companies, private-equity firms and hedge funds -- have spent fortunes on lobbying efforts and campaign contributions, purchasing access, good will and clout.

The result has often been slack regulation and poor discipline to the detriment of the public, markets and, as has recently been shown, the institutions themselves. Look at how lawmakers barred the Commodity Futures Trading Commission from regulating derivatives.

$146 Million Gifts

Individuals and political-action committees representing securities and investment firms contributed $146 million to federal political campaigns in 2007 and 2008, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, a Washington-based research group that tracks money flows in U.S. politics.

Insurance companies were good for $44 million over the same period; commercial banks kicked in $35 million; hedge-fund related donations totaled $17 million.

These numbers may not match Bernard Madoff’s alleged shenanigans, but the money isn’t chump change. It will get you 15 minutes over coffee with a senator, congressman or administration member, if not a five-course meal in a Washington restaurant.

Since the start of 2003, Citigroup Inc. has been the largest contributor to the war chests of Christopher Dodd and Richard Shelby, respectively, the chairman and ranking Republican of the Senate Banking Committee. Hedge fund SAC Capital Partners ranked No. 3 among Dodd’s biggest donors, followed by American International Group Inc. and Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc.

Top Donors

Seventeen of the top 20 donors were banks, insurers, hedge funds or an industrial company with a large finance unit.

Four of the five biggest contributors to the 2008 campaign of Barney Frank, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, are finance companies, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. Ditto for Spencer Bachus, the committee’s ranking Republican. Employees and others associated with Goldman Sachs Group Inc. comprised the largest corporate-related donors to the Obama presidential campaign. JPMorgan Chase & Co. was the sixth-biggest and Citigroup was No. 7.

People associated with Merrill Lynch & Co., Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan made up the top five donors to John McCain’s presidential bid.

These contributions aren’t charity. The donors expect favors in return. So far, they have received them. In the late 1990s, Citigroup’s financial muscle helped persuade Congress to undo almost seven decades of regulation that separated investment and commercial banking and that kept banks and insurance companies out of each other’s businesses.

Money for Favors

Hedge funds and private-equity firms in 2007 successfully defeated proposals that would have resulted in their paying higher taxes. Since the beginning of 1989, Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae’s employees and political-action committees donated $19.5 million to candidates for federal office. This and lobbying “resulted in keeping the two companies afloat as more Americans defaulted on their mortgages,” the center said.

American government wasn’t supposed to work like this. The men who wrote the Constitution in 1787 envisioned a nation balanced by geographic tradeoffs: Each state was awarded two senators and, no matter how small, at least one representative.

The founding fathers didn’t plan for a country where industries or even single companies might grow so wealthy that they could purchase compliant regulation and beneficial laws.

The U.S. can’t revert to the agrarian economy it was in the 18th century. Nor should it. Also the issue of buying influence isn’t limited to finance. Still, that shouldn’t stop Americans from recapturing control of their financial destiny.

Corrupting Role

One solution is to have only taxpayers fund campaigns for Congress and the White House, removing altogether the corrupting role of private capital.

Failing that, prohibit senators and representatives from accepting contributions from interests linked to industries under the jurisdiction of the committees on which they sit.

A third option might be to have a small limit on the total amount of funding an industry can contribute to an individual political campaign.

Just restricting the amount of money spent on elections won’t solve the problem of influence-peddling. But it would help to create a fairer system.

The pervasive role of lobbyists also needs to be curtailed. What’s needed is much more transparency in their activities. For ethics restrictions to work, “there must be an open, publicly accessible reporting system where every executive-branch appointee records meetings with registered lobbyists during and after working hours, both inside and outside the office,” former U.S. attorney Whitney North Seymour Jr., wrote last month in a letter to the New York Times.

Spot on. Even go a step further and have the same rules apply to senators, congressmen, their staffs and Congressional- committee staffs.

The message is clear: The U.S. government isn’t for sale.

(Michael R. Sesit is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.)

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