INSIDE JOB

3 comments

Posted on 23rd February 2013 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

Academy Award winning documentary that exposes the real crime in America

IVY LEAGUE WALL STREET PAWN IS ROMNEY’S TOP ECONOMIC ADVISOR

9 comments

Posted on 4th November 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

, , ,

If you liked Bush’s economic policies, you’re going to love Romney’s, because they both listen to the same asshole.

Submitted by Charles Ferguson, Oscar-winning creator of Inside Job

Standing Behind Every Great Con Artist is Someone Like Glenn Hubbard

Mitt Romney has a credibility problem. He changes his beliefs like laundry (abortion, medical insurance, whether Bin Laden was worth killing, attacking Iran), refuses to disclose his tax returns, and won’t explain how he could possibly pay for the tax cuts he proposes. But there is another scandal in Romney’s campaign — namely Glenn Hubbard, Romney’s chief economic advisor, who was chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors under George W. Bush, and is now Dean of Columbia Business School.

I interviewed Hubbard for my documentary film Inside Job, and analyzed his record again for my book Predator Nation. The film interview became famous because Hubbard blew his cool after I interrogated him about his conflicts of interest: “This isn’t a deposition, sir. I was polite enough to give you time, foolishly I now see, but you have three more minutes. Give it your best shot.” But the really important thing about Hubbard isn’t his personality; it’s that as an economist and an advisor, he is a total, unmitigated disaster.

First, Hubbard has an abysmal track record in economic policy, including the very issues that Romney has made the pillar of his presidential campaign. Second, like Romney, Hubbard refuses to disclose critical information about his income, conflicts of interest, and paid advocacy activities. Third, both in public statements and in my personal experience, Hubbard has been evasive, misleading, and even dishonest when discussing both policy issues and his own conflicts of interest. And last but not least, those conflicts of interest are huge: Hubbard has long advocated policies that Wall Street loves, often without disclosing that he is, in fact, highly paid by Wall Street.

Let’s start with tax cuts, since Romney claims that he can cut tax rates sharply without increasing the deficit, and without benefiting the rich. Mr. Romney claims that tax cuts will be fully paid for by closing loopholes and deductions, and will not add to the deficit; Hubbard has publicly supported Romney’s claims. Interestingly, Mr. Hubbard has quite a record on this very issue. Shortly after becoming chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors in 2001, he spearheaded the Bush administration’s tax cuts, and he said lots about them.

How did that work out? First, we now know that over half of the benefits of the Bush-Hubbard tax cuts went to the top 1 percent of the population. In part to benefit the wealthy, the tax cuts were also structured to reward investment in financial assets, rather than either consumer spending or real capital investment. As a result, the tax cuts caused huge budget deficits, yet did little to stimulate growth or job creation: there were basically no new jobs created during the Bush administration, despite adding trillions to the national debt.

That is not, however, what Hubbard said would happen. On August 22, 2001, he published anarticle in the Wall Street Journal entitled “Tax Cuts Won’t Hurt the Surplus.” Oops. In the article, also, Hubbard predicts that his tax cuts would preserve the Clinton budget surpluses by causing GNP to grow 0.3 percent per year faster.

Hubbard also co-authored an article with William Dudley, then the chief economist of Goldman Sachs, entitled “How Capital Markets Enhance Economic Performance and Job Creation.” It was published by the Goldman Sachs Global Markets Institute in 2004, just as the housing bubble was getting seriously crazy. In my filmed interview, here’s how Hubbard described the article:

INTERVIEWER: In 2004 you co-wrote a paper with William Dudley, who was then the chief economist of Goldman Sachs. What do you think about the arguments you made in that paper?

GLENN HUBBARD: As I recall that paper, the arguments were basically to the effect that healthy capital markets are important for the economy, views that I held before and certainly hold after.

Well, here’s what that paper really said. Hubbard wrote that “The ascendancy of the U.S. capital markets” had yielded “enhanced stability of the U.S. banking system… more jobs and higher wages… less frequent and milder [recessions}… a revolution in housing finance.” Later in the article: “The capital markets have helped make the housing market less volatile… ” Next, “Credit crunches… are a thing of the past… ” and my personal favorite, “The revolution in housing finance has also… been important in making the economy less cyclical.” In other parts of the article, Hubbard and Dudley specifically praise credit default swaps for their role in reducing and spreading risk. Like wow, man.

Hubbard refused to tell me whether he was paid to write that article; no payment is disclosed in the document itself, nor on Hubbard’s CV. Which brings us to Mr. Hubbard’s many, many disclosure problems and conflicts of interest. After the release of my film Inside Job, Columbia University was forced to establish disclosure requirements for the first time for its professors. At the time, Hubbard stated that he welcomed them. Well, it wasn’t quite that way in our interview. Here are some selections, verbatim and unedited:

INTERVIEWER: Let me go back to your own personal business involvements. I’m looking at your résumé now, and I guess it looks to me as if the majority of your outside activities are consulting and directorship arrangements with the financial services industry. Would you not agree with that characterization?

GLENN HUBBARD: Not to my knowledge. I don’t think my consulting clients are even on my C.V.

INTERVIEWER: Who are your consulting clients?

GLENN HUBBARD: I don’t believe I have to discuss that with you. You have a few more minutes and the interview’s over.

Slightly later:

INTERVIEWER: Okay. Who are you a director of?

GLENN HUBBARD: I don’t believe I have to answer that question.

Well, actually, now that Columbia had adopted disclosure regulations, we now know at least something about Hubbard’s income sources, and the overwhelming majority of them are in the financial sector. The HTML version his CV (which you can read here) does not fully disclose his activities, but if you click on the PDF version, you see more. And what you see is that at least two thirds of his literally dozens of consulting, advisory, and directorship arrangements over the last decade are with the financial sector — MetLife, KKR, Goldman Sachs, Freddie Mac, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, the list goes on and on.

Even Columbia’s new policy does not require Hubbard to disclose how much they pay him; all we know currently comes from required SEC disclosures of his director’s fees from the boards of three financial sector companies, which pay him over $700,000 per year. His total financial sector income, including consulting and speaking, is undoubtedly much higher. Yet here’s how he described his income in our interview, once again verbatim and unedited:

INTERVIEWER: Forgive me, but I’m going to be direct: How does your personal income compare, your private income as opposed to your university salary?

GLENN HUBBARD: Vastly times more, because I write textbooks, so that’s much more remunerative than being a professor.

INTERVIEWER: How about your consulting income from the financial services industry, and your directorships?

GLENN HUBBARD: I don’t do much consulting in the financial services industry. I do have some directorships, but the income from those would be modest compared to my other income.

Textbooks. You read that correctly. As for not doing “much” consulting for the financial sector, I counted consulting or directorships with 29 financial sector firms on your CV. And your $700K per year directorship income is “modest” compared to the other stuff? Really, now, Glenn.

But we’re not done yet. There is a more that Hubbard still hasn’t disclosed, and refused to disclose to us when we were making Inside Job. On his CV, Hubbard lists The Analysis Group as a consulting client. That is misleading at best. The Analysis Group is one of a half dozen major firms that specializes in matching private companies and lobbying groups, who are the real clients, with professors who they pay to support their positions in regulatory, policy, Congressional, and legal disputes. It was The Analysis Group, for example, that arranged for Hubbard to testify on behalf of two Bear Stearns hedge fund managers who were prosecuted for securities fraud in 2009. Hubbard was paid $100,000 for his testimony.

Hubbard has been affiliated with the Analysis Group for many years, but when we asked him, he refused to disclose who he had worked for or what he had done. He also refused to provide us with a copy of the Federal financial disclosure form he was required to submit in 2001; we couldn’t obtain it from the White House, because they had already destroyed (yes, that is interesting, isn’t it?). Nor has Hubbard provided his total consulting income, his tax returns, or a comprehensive list of his income sources and clients for the period since he left the White House in 2003.

So the next time you hear Mitt Romney refuse to release his tax returns, and then tell you that he can cut taxes and balance the budget while creating lots of jobs, well… I would ask you to remember that standing behind every great con artist is someone like… Glenn Hubbard.

2012 ELECTION – ANOTHER INSIDE JOB

6 comments

Posted on 26th September 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

Charles Ferguson: Why the 2012 election will be another inside job

 
While Romney and Obama trade insults about who’s the worse Washington insider, the reality is both are in hock to Big Money
 
Last week, Mitt Romney and President Obama traded insults in a most amazing way, reminding us that success in American politics these days requires two things: saying the most absurd things with a straight face, and maximizing the appearance of differences with your opponent, while minimizing their reality. Consider …
 
Obama:
“I’ve learned some lessons. Most important is you can’t change Washington from inside, only from the outside.”

Romney:
“He said he can’t change Washington from inside. He can only change it from outside. I can change Washington. I will change Washington. We’ll get the job done from the inside.”
Obama:
“What kind of inside job is he talking about? Is it the job of rubber-stamping the top-down, you’re-on-your-own agenda of this Republican Congress? Because if it is, we don’t want it … We don’t want an inside job in Washington.”
 
 
Well, Romney’s a pretty obvious case of Mr Insider. But let’s look at Obama. He doesn’t want an inside job? Over the last four years, Obama has appointed nothing but insiders – many of whom had actively contributed to the financial crisis and profited from it – to his administration’s senior regulatory, law enforcement, and economic policy jobs. The head of the SEC, Mary Shapiro, was fresh from running the investment banking industry’s “self-regulator”, Finra, which gave her a $9m severance bonus to soften the pain of a low government salary. Her director of enforcement, Robert Khuzami, had been general counsel for the Americas of Deutsche Bank during the bubble.
 
The head of the justice department criminal division, Lanny Breuer, had been in charge of the white-collar criminal defense practice of Covington & Burling, a law firm that represents and lobbies for nearly every major bank. The head of the office of management and budget, Jacob Lew, made millions as the chief financial officer of Citigroup Alternative Investments, even as that group lost billions for Citigroup. As head of the National Economic Council, we got Larry Summers, who as Clinton’s treasury secretary pushed through the repeal of Glass-Steagall and a law banning regulation of OTC derivatives, and who then proceeded to make $7m from financial services firms in the year prior to joining the Obama administration (including $135,000 for a single speech to Goldman Sachs). Other senior jobs went to Goldman Sachs lobbyists, investment bankers, private equity executives, and the former chief lobbyist of Fannie Mae.
 
And beyond Obama’s personnel, there were his policies. He did nothing about the obscene $14bn in bonuses awarded in early 2009 by banks that would literally have been bankrupt without federal bailouts; he failed to prosecute even a single bank or financial executive despite clear evidence of rampant, systemic fraud; and he has since attempted only the most pitiful of systemic reforms.
 
Nor is this pattern restricted to the financial sector: despite the worst oil spill in history, one that killed 11 people, and a lethal mine disaster that followed deception of safety inspectors, there have been no prosecutions of energy executives, either. And it all shows: in this campaign, Obama has actually raised more money than Mitt Romney, the poster boy of plutocracy.
 
Well, I’ll be the first to admit that I have a personal axe to grind. Like, how do I know all this stuff? Well, two years ago, I made a documentary film about the financial crisis, followed recently by a book. The film, based on a year of research and nearly 100 on-camera interviews, chronicled the thoroughly bipartisan process of deregulation, political corruption, and lack of law enforcement that paved the way for the financial crisis. It concludes with a detailed examination of the Obama administration’s abysmal record.
 
 
The film won the Academy Award for best documentary in 2011; in my Oscar acceptance speech, I called out the lack of criminal prosecutions, to audience applause. The title of this film? I never thought you’d ask.
 
Inside Job.
 
So there you have it – my real gripe is that Obama stole my title for his petty spat with Romney, each of them pretending to be the guy who would fix Washington corruption – when, of course, neither of them would.
 
 But the sad truth is that the more the two candidates pretend to be at each other’s throats, the more similar they are in reality, at least where money is concerned. They would both let America’s new financial oligarchy run amok, at the nation’s great expense. This is just one domain among many in which both candidates avoid the truth, preferring to trade blows in the theater of the absurd.
 
 

FOR MEDIA TRUTH – TURN TO RUSSIA TODAY

19 comments

Posted on 20th July 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

,

INSIDE JOB – THE MOVIE

4 comments

Posted on 8th July 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

, ,

 Ferguson knows the enemy.

 

Watch Charles Ferguson’s “Inside Job” (full-length feature embedded)

 
Charles Ferguson is an American hero. He produced, wrote, and directed this masterpiece about the fraud and corruption that led to the crisis. Then, upon winning the Academy Award for Best Documentary in 2011, he began his acceptance speech by stating, “Forgive me, I must start by pointing out that three years after our horrific financial crisis caused by financial fraud, not a single financial executive has gone to jail, and that’s wrong.”
 
Ferguson has not stopped there. He recently published his book, Predator Nation, and has continued his crusade to expose fraud, criminality, and corruption, in the private sector, in government, and in academia.If you have not seen this movie, you must do so. If you know anyone who has not seen this movie, share. Every American should be aware of what is transpiring at the highest levels of our establishment. Of course, this goes well beyond America’s borders; everyone in this world should make themselves aware of the injustice, criminality, and corruption that sways policy and creates a needlessly precarious financial world for us all.
 
 

 

Please consider purchasing Inside Job  not only to support Charles Ferguson and his crew for their work, but because there are incredible extras included – including deleted scenes and excellent interviews that did not make it into the movie. In particular, I recommend watching the interviews with Lee Hsien Loong, the Prime Minister of Singapore.

Jaime Falcon