Death of the American Empire:
America is self-destructing & bringing the
rest of the world down with it
By Tanya Cariina Hsu
Global Research, October 25, 2008
I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties
than standing armies. (Thomas Jefferson, US President; 1743 - 1826)
America is dying. It is self-destructing and bringing the rest of the
world down with it.
Often referred to as a sub-prime mortgage collapse, this obfuscates the
real reason. By associating tangible useless failed mortgages, at least
something 'real' can be blamed for the carnage. The problem is, this is
myth. The magnitude of this fiscal collapse happened because it was all
based on hot air.
The banking industry renamed insurance betting guarantees as 'credit
default swaps' and risky gambling wagers were called 'derivatives'.
Financial managers and banking executives were selling the ultimate con
to the entire world, akin to the snake-oil salesmen from the 18th
century but this time in suits and ties. And by October 2009 it was a
quadrillion-dollar (that's $1,000 trillion) industry that few could
understand.
Propped up by false hope, America is now falling like a house of
cards.
It all began in the early part of the 20th century. In 1907 J.P. Morgan,
a private New York banker, published a rumour that a competing unnamed
large bank was about to fail. It was a false charge but customers
nonetheless raced to their banks to withdraw their money, in case it was
their bank. As they pulled out their funds the banks lost their cash
deposits and were forced to call in their loans. People now therefore
had to pay back their mortgages to fill the banks with income, going
bankrupt in the process. The 1907 panic resulted in a crash that
prompted the creation of the Federal Reserve, a private banking cartel
with the veneer of an independent government organisation. Effectively,
it was a coup by elite bankers in order to control the industry.
When signed into law in 1913, the Federal Reserve would loan and supply
the nation's money, but with interest. The more money it was able to
print, the more 'income' for itself it generated. By its very nature the
Federal Reserve would forever keep producing debt to stay alive. It was
able to print America's monetary supply at will, regulating its value.
To control valuation however, inflation had to be kept in check.
The Federal Reserve then doubled America's money supply within five
years, and in 1920 it called in a mass percentage of loans. Over five
thousand banks collapsed overnight. One year later the Federal Reserve
again increased the money supply by 62%, but in 1929 it again called the
loans back in, en masse. This time, the crash of 1929 caused over
sixteen thousand banks to fail and an 89% plunge on the stock market.
The private and well-protected banks within the Federal Reserve system
were able to snap up the failed banks at pennies on the dollar.
The nation fell into the Great Depression and in April 1933 President
Roosevelt issued an executive order that confiscated all gold bullion
from the public. Those who refused to turn in their gold would be
imprisoned for ten years, and by the end of the year the gold standard
was abolished. What had been redeemable for gold became paper 'legal
tender', and gold could no longer be exchanged for cash as it had once
been.
Later, in 1971, President Nixon removed the dollar from the gold
standard altogether, therefore no longer trading at the internationally
fixed price of $35. The US dollar was now worth whatever the US decided
it was worth because it was 'as good as gold'. It had no standard of
measure, and became the universal currency. Treasury bills (short-term
notes) and bonds (long-term notes) replaced gold as value, promissory
notes of the US government and paid for by the taxpayer. Additionally,
because gold was exempt from currency reporting requirements it could
not be traced, unlike the fiduciary (i.e. that based upon trust)
monetary systems of the West. That was not in America's best interest.
After the Great Depression private banks remained afraid to make home
loans, so Roosevelt created Fannie Mae. A state supported mortgage bank,
it provided federal funding to finance home mortgages for affordable
housing. In 1968 President Johnson privatised Fannie Mae, and in 1970,
Freddie Mac was created to compete with Fannie Mae. Both of them bought
mortgages from banks and other lenders, and sold them onto new
investors.
The post World War II boom had created an America flush with cash and
assets. As a military industrial complex, war exponentially profited the
US and, unlike any empire in history, it shot to superpower status. But
it failed to remember that, historically, whenever empires rose they
fell in direct proportion.
Americans could afford all the modern conveniences, exporting its
manufactured goods all over the world. After the Vietnam War, the US
went into an economic decline. But people were loath to give up their
elevated standard of living despite the loss of jobs, and production was
increasingly sent overseas. A sense of delusion and entitlement kept
Americans on the treadmill of consumer consumption.
In 1987 the US stock market plunged by 22% in one day because of
high-risk futures trading, called derivatives, and in 1989 the Savings &
Loan crisis resulted in President George H.W. Bush using $142 billion in
taxpayer funds to rescue half of the S&L's. To do so, Freddie Mac was
given the task of giving sub-prime (below prime-rate) mortgages to
low-income families. In 2000, the "irrational exuberance" of the dot-com
bubble burst, and 50% of high-tech firms went bankrupt wiping $5
trillion from their over-inflated market values.
After this crisis, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan kept interest
rates so low they were less than the rate of inflation. Anyone saving
his or her income actually lost money, and the savings rate soon fell
into negative territory.
During the 1990s, advertisers went into overdrive, marketing an ever
more luxurious lifestyle, all made available with cheap easy credit.
Second mortgages became commonplace, and home equity loans were used to
pay credit card bills. The more Americans bought, the more they fell
into debt. But as long as they had a house their false sense of security
remained: their home was their equity, it would always go up in value,
and they could always remortgage at lower rates if needed. The financial
industry also believed that housing prices would forever climb, but
should they ever fall the central bank would cut interest rates so that
prices would jump back up. It was, everyone believed, a win-win
situation.
Greenspan's rock-bottom interest rates let anyone afford a home. Minimum
wage service workers with aspirations to buy a half million-dollar house
were able to secure 100% loans, the mortgage lenders fully aware that
they would not be able to keep up the payments.
So many people received these sub-prime loans that the investment houses
and lenders came up with a new scheme: bundle these virtually worthless
home loans and sell them as solid US investments to unsuspecting
countries who would not know the difference. American lives of excess
and consumer spending never suffered, and were being propped up by
foreign nations none the wiser.
It has always been the case that a bank would lend out more than it
actually had, because interest payments generated its income. The more
the bank loaned, the more interest it collected even with no money in
the vault. It was a lucrative industry of giving away money it never had
in the first place. Mortgage banks and investment houses even borrowed
money on international money markets to fund these 100% plus sub-prime
mortgages, and began lending more than ten times their underlying
assets.
After 9/11, George Bush told the nation to spend, and during a time of
war, that's what the nation did. It borrowed at unprecedented levels so
as to not only pay for its war on terror in the Middle East (calculated
to cost $4 trillion) but also pay for tax cuts at the very time it
should have increased taxes. Bush removed the reserve requirements in
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, from 10% to 2.5%. They were free to not only
lend even more at bargain basement interest rates, they only needed a
fraction of reserves. Soon banks lent thirty times asset value. It was,
as one economist put it, an 'orgy of excess'.
It was flagrant overspending during a time of war. At no time in history
has a nation gone into conflict without sacrifice, cutbacks, tax
increases, and economic conservation.
And there was a growing chance that, just like in 1929, investors would
rush to claim their money all at once.
To guarantee, therefore, these high risk mortgages, the same financial
houses that sold them then created 'insurance policies' against the
sub-prime investments they were selling, marketed as Credit Default
Swaps (CDS). But the government must regulate insurance policies, so by
calling them CDS they remained totally unregulated. Financial
institutions were 'hedging their bets' and selling premiums to protect
the junk assets. In other words, the asset that should go up in value
could also have a side-bet, just in case, that it might go down. By
October 2008, CDS were trading at $62 trillion, more than the stock
markets of the whole world combined.
These bets had absolutely no value whatsoever and were not investments.
They were just financial instruments called derivatives - high stakes
gambling, 'nothing from nothing' - or as Warren Buffet referred to them,
'Weapons of Financial Mass Destruction'. The derivatives trade was
'worth' more than one quadrillion dollars, or larger than the economy of
the entire world. (In September 2008 the global Gross Domestic Product
was $60 trillion).
Challenged as being illegal in the 1990s, Greenspan legalised the
derivatives practise. Soon hedge funds became an entire industry,
betting on the derivatives market and gambling as much as they wanted.
It was easy because it was money they did not have in the first place.
The industry had all the appearances of banks, but the hedge funds,
equity funds, and derivatives brokers had no access to government loans
in the event of a default. If the owners defaulted, the hedge funds had
no money to pay 'from nothing'. Those who had hedged on an asset going
up or down would not be able to collect on the winnings or losses.
The market had become the largest industry in the world, and all the
financial giants were cashing in: Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers,
Citigroup, and AIG. But homeowners, long maxed out on their credit, were
now beginning to default on their mortgages. Not only were they paying
for their house but also all the debt amassed over the years for car,
credit card and student loans, medical payments and home equity loans.
They had borrowed to pay for groceries and skyrocketing health insurance
premiums to keep up with their bigger houses and cars; they refinanced
the debt they had for lower rates that soon ballooned. The average
American owed 25% of their annual income to credit card debts alone.
In 2008, housing prices began to slide precipitously downwards and
mortgages were suddenly losing value. Manufacturing orders were down
4.5% by September, inventories began to pile up, unemployment was
soaring and average house foreclosures had increased by 121% and up to
200% in California.
The financial giants had to stop trading these mortgage-backed
securities, as now their losses would have to be visibly accounted for.
Investors began withdrawing their funds. Bear Stearns, heavily
specialised in home loan portfolios, was the first to go in March.
Just as they had done in the 20th century, JP Morgan swooped in and
picked up Bear Stearns for a pittance. One year prior Bear Stearns
shares traded at $159 but JP Morgan was able to buy in and take over at
$2 a share. In September, Washington Mutual collapsed, the largest bank
failure in history. JP Morgan again came in and paid $1.9 billion for
assets valued at $176 billion. It was a fire sale.
Relatively quietly over the summer Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, the
publicly traded companies responsible for 80% of the home mortgage
loans, lost almost 90% of their value for the year. Together they were
responsible for half the outstanding loan amounts but were now in debt
$80 to every $1 in capital reserves.
To guarantee they would stay alive, the Federal Reserve stepped in and
took over Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. On September 7th 2008 they were
put into "conservatorship": known as nationalisation to the rest of the
world, but Americans have difficulty with the idea of any government run
industry that required taxpayer increases.
What the government was really doing was handing out an unlimited line
of credit. Done by the Federal Reserve and not US Treasury, it was able
to bypass Congressional approval. The Treasury Department then auctioned
off Treasury bills to raise money for the Federal Reserve's own use, but
nonetheless the taxpayer would be funding the rescue. The bankers had
bled tens of billions from the system by hedging and derivative
gambling, and triggered the portfolio inter-bank lending freeze, which
then seized up and crashed.
The takeover was presented as a government funded bailout of an
arbitrary $700 billion, which does nothing to solve the problem. No
economists were asked to present their views to Congress, and the loan
only perpetuates the myth that the banking system is not really dead.
In reality, the damage will not be $700 billion but closer to $5
trillion, the value of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae's mortgages. It was
nothing less than a bailout of the quadrillion dollar derivatives
industry which otherwise faced payouts of over a trillion dollars on CDS
mortgage-backed securities they had sold. It was necessary, said
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, to save the country from a "housing
correction". But, he added, the $700 billion taxpayer funded takeover
would not prevent other banks from collapsing, in turn causing a stock
market crash.
In other words Paulson was blackmailing Congress in order to lead a coup
by the banking elite under the false guise of necessary legislation to
stop the dyke from flooding. It merely shifted wealth from one class to
another, as it had done almost a century prior. No sooner were the words
were out of Paulson's mouth before other financial institutions began
imploding, and with them the disintegration of the global financial
system - much modelled after the lauded system of American banking.
In September the Federal Reserve, its line of credit assured, then
bought the world largest insurance company, AIG, for $85 billion for an
80% stake. AIG was the largest seller of CDS, but now that it was in the
position of having to pay out, from collateral it did not have, it was
teetering on the edge of bankruptcy.
In October the entire country of Iceland went bankrupt, having bought
American worthless sub-prime mortgages as investments. European banks
began exploding, all wanting to cash in concurrently on their inflated
US stocks to pay off the low interest rate debts before rates climbed
higher. The year before the signs had been evident, when the largest US
mortgage lender Countrywide fell. Soon after, the largest lender in the
UK, Northern Rock, went under - London long having copied Wall Street
creative financing. Japan and Korea's auto manufacturing nosedived by
37%, global economies contracting. Pakistan is on the edge of collapse
too, with real reserves at $3 billion - enough to only buy a month's
supply of food and oil and attempting to stall payments to Saudi Arabia
for the 100,000 barrels of oil per day it provides to the country. Under
President Musharraf, who left office in the nick of time, Pakistan's
currency lost 25% of its value, its inflation running at 25%.
Meanwhile energy costs had soared, with oil reaching a peak of almost
$150 per barrel in the summer. The costs were immediately passed on to
the already spent homeowner, in rising heating and fuel, transport and
manufacturing costs. Yet 30% of the cost of a barrel of oil was based
upon Wall Street speculators, climbing to 60% as a speculative fear
factor during the summer months. As soon as the financial crisis hit,
suddenly oil prices slid down, slicing oil costs to $61 from a high of
$147 in June and proving that the 60% speculation factor was far more
accurate. This sudden decline also revealed OPEC's lack of control over
spiralling prices during the past few years, almost squarely laid on the
shoulders of Saudi Arabia alone. When OPEC, in September, sought to
maintain higher prices by cutting production, it was Saudi Arabia who
voted against such a move at the expense of its own revenue.
Europe then decided that no more would it be ruined by the excess of
America. 'Olde Europe' may have had enough of being dictated to by the
US, who refused to compromise on loans lent to their own broken nations
after WWII. On October the 13th, the once divided EU nations
unilaterally agreed to an emergency rescue plan totalling $2.3 trillion.
It was more than three times greater than the US package for a
catastrophe America alone had created.
By mid October, the Dow, NASDAQ and S&P 500 had erased all the gains
they made over the previous decade. Greenspan's pyramid scheme of easy
money from nothing resulted in a massive overextension of credit,
inflated housing prices, and incredible stock valuations, achieved
because investors would never withdraw their money all at once. But now
it was crashing at break-neck speed and no solution in sight. President
Bush said that people ought not to worry at all because "America is the
most attractive destination for investors around the globe."
Those who will hurt the most are the very men and women who grew the
country after WWII, and saved their pensions for retirement due now.
They had built the country during the war production years, making its
weapons and arms for global conflict. During the Cold War the USSR was
the ever-present enemy and thus the military industrial complex
continued to grow. Only when there is a war does America profit.
Russia will not tolerate a new cold war build-up of ballistic missiles.
And the Middle East has seen its historical ally turn into its worst
nightmare, be it militarily or economically. No longer will these
nations continue to support the dollar as the world's currency. The
world's economy is no longer America's to control and the US is now
indebted to the rest of the world. No more will the US be able to demand
its largest Middle Eastern oil supplier open up its banking books so as
to be transparent and free from corruption and terrorist connections
lest there be consequences - the biggest act of criminal corruption in
history has just been perpetrated by the United States.
It was the best con game in town: get paid well for selling vast amounts
of risk, fail, and then have governments fix the problem at the expense
of the taxpayers who never saw a penny of shared wealth to begin with.
There is no easy solution to this crisis, its effects multiplying like
an infectious disease.
Ironically, least affected by the crisis are Islamic banks.
They have largely been immune to the collapse because Islamic banking
prohibits the acquisition of wealth via gambling (or alcohol, tobacco,
pornography, or stocks in armaments companies), and forbids the buying
and selling of a debt as well as usury. Additionally, Shari'ah banking
laws forbid investing in any company with debts that exceed thirty
percent.
"Islamic banking institutions have not failed per se as they deal in
tangible assets and assume the risk" said Dr. Mohammed Ramady, Professor
of Economics at King Fahd University of Petroleum & Minerals. "Although
the Islamic banking sector is also part of the global economy, the
impact of direct exposure to sub-prime asset investments has been low"
he continued. "The liquidity slowdown has especially affected Dubai,
with its heavy international borrowing. The most negative effect has
been a loss of confidence in the regional stock markets." Instead, said
Dr. Ramady, oil surplus Arab nations are "reconsidering overseas
investments in financial assets" and speeding up their own domestic
projects.
Eight years ago, in May 2000, Saudi Islamic banker His Highness Dr.
Nayef bin Fawaaz ibn Sha'alan publicly gave a series of economic
lectures in Gulf states. At the time his research showed that Arab
investments in the US, to the tune of $1.5 trillion, were effectively
being held hostage and he recommended they be pulled out and reinvested
in the tangibles of the Arab and Islamic markets. "Not in stocks however
because the stock market could be manipulated remotely, as we have seen
in the last couple of years in the Arab market where trillions of
dollars evaporated" he said.
He warned then that it was a certainty that the US economic system was
on the verge of collapse because of its cumulative debts,
ever-increasing deficit and the interest on that debt. "When the debts
and deficits come due, they just issue new Treasury bonds to cover the
old bonds due, with their interest and the new deficit too." The cycle
cannot be stopped or the debt cancelled because the US would no longer
be able to borrow. The consequence of relieving this cycle would be a
total collapse of their economic system as opposed to the partial,
albeit massive, crash of 2008.
"Islamic banking", said Dr. Al-Sha'alan, "always protects the
individuals' wealth while putting a cap on selfishness and greed. It has
the best of capitalism - filtering out its negatives - and the best of
socialism - filtering out its negatives too." Both systems inevitably
had to fail. Additionally, Europe and Japan did not need to be held
accountable and indebted to America anymore for protection against the
Soviets.
"The essential difference between the Islamic economic system and the
capitalist system", he continued "is that in Islam wealth belongs to God
- the individual being only its manager. It is a means, not a goal. In
capitalism, it is the reverse: money belongs to the individual, and is a
goal in and of itself. In America especially, money is worshipped like
God."
In sum, the crash of the entire global economic system is a result of
America's fiscal arrogance based upon one set of rules for itself and
another for the rest of the world. Its increased creative financing
deluded its people into a false sense of security, and now looks like
the failure of capitalism altogether.
The whole exercise in democracy by force against Arab Muslim nations has
almost bankrupted the US. The Cold War is over and the US has nothing to
offer: no exports, no production, few natural resources, and no service
sector economy.
The very markets that resisted US economic policies the most, having
curbed foreign direct investments into America, are those who will fare
best and come out ahead.
But not before having paid a very high price.
Tanya Cariina Hsu is a political researcher and analyst
focusing on Saudi Arabian and US relations. One of the contributors to
recent written testimony on the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia for the US
Congressional Senate Judiciary Committee on behalf of FOCA (Friends of
Charities Association) in its Hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington
D.C., her analysis has been published and critically acclaimed
throughout the US, Europe and the Middle East.
The first to break the barrier against public discussion of the Israeli
influence upon US foreign policy decision making, in Capitol Hill's "A
Clean Break" Symposium in Washington D.C. in 2004, as the Institute for
Research: Middle East Policy (IRmep) Director of Development and Senior
Research Analyst, Ms. Hsu remains an International Fellow with the
Institute.
Born in London, she re-located to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia in 2005 and is
currently completing a book on US policy towards Saudi Arabia.
(end)
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&code=HSU20081023&articleId=10651
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