Nomi Prins: Crony Capitalism and Corruption – An Entirely Rigged Political-Financial System

Guest Post by Jesse

 

I think you would do well to watch this video below.

Too big to fail is a seven-year phenomenon created by the most powerful central banks to bolster the largest, most politically connected US and European banks. More than that, it’s a global concern predicated on that handful of private banks controlling too much market share and elite central banks infusing them with boatloads of cheap capital and other aid.

Synthetic bank and market subsidization disguised as ‘monetary policy’ has spawned artificial asset and debt bubbles – everywhere. The most rapacious speculative capital and associated risk flows from these power-players to the least protected, or least regulated, locales.

There is no such thing as isolated ‘Big Bank’ problems. Rather, complex products, risky practices, leverage and co-dependent transactions have contagion ramifications, particularly in emerging markets whose histories are already lined with disproportionate shares of debt, interest rate and currency related travails.

The notion of free markets, mechanisms where buyers and sellers can meet to exchange securities or various kinds of goods, in which each participant has access to the same information, is a fallacy. Transparency in trading across global financial markets is a fallacy. Not only are markets rigged by, and for, the biggest players, so is the entire political-financial system.

The connection between democracy and free markets is interesting though. Democracy is predicated on the idea that every vote counts equally, and in the utopian perspective, the government adopts policies that benefit or adhere to the majority of those votes. In fact, it’s the minority of elite families and private individuals that exercise the most control over America’s policies and actions.

The myth of a free market is that every trader or participant is equal, when in fact the biggest players with access to the most information and technology are the ones that have a disproportionate advantage over the smaller players. What we have is a plutocracy of government and markets. The privileged few don’t care, or need to care, about democracy any more than they would ever want to have truly “free” markets, though what they do want are markets liberated from as many regulations as possible. In practice, that leads to huge inherent risk.

Michael Lewis’ latest book on high frequency trading seems to have struck some sort of a national chord. Yet what he writes about is the mere tip of the iceberg covered in my book. He’s talking about rigged markets – which have been a problem since small investors began investing with the big boys, believing they had an equal shot.

I’m talking about an entirely rigged political-financial system.

Nomi Prins

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
6 Comments
Lysander
Lysander
November 16, 2015 6:39 am

Let’s try “not too big to hang” for a change.

TC
TC
November 16, 2015 7:49 am

Eh, this shit’s been going on a lot longer than 7 years. Chapter 2 of Griffin’s 1994 opus “The Creature From Jekyll Island” is “The Name of the Game is Bailout.”

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
November 16, 2015 2:40 pm

For many of us, whether the system is “rigged” is no longer in question. However the question of the day is, how do we “un-rig” it?

Sensetti
Sensetti
November 16, 2015 2:43 pm

VOTE REPUBLICAN straight down the ticket!

suzanna
suzanna
November 16, 2015 3:27 pm

Nomi Prinz is likely telling it like it is
her came out (President’s Bankers) in 4-8-14

Michael Lewis reveals details (Flash Boys) – 3-31-14

Catherine Austin Fitts reveals more (Solari report)
in countless interviews. She claims the US has been
fleeced for 40 trillion, and the fleecing will continue
until we are 100% broke.

suzanna
suzanna
November 16, 2015 3:28 pm

her book, oops