He uses the calamity around the Hewlett-Packard / Autonomy
deal as the example of dishonest banking:
Last year, Hewlett-Packard, the
world’s largest PC manufacturer, coughed up a humongous $11.1 billion to buy
the British software company Autonomy. Even at the time, HP was widely thought
to have overpaid horribly, but by quite how much only became apparent this
week, when the firm wrote off more than three quarters of the purchase price.
In the process, HP claimed that it had been deliberately sold a pup – the books
had been wilfully cooked, it alleged, to make profits seem higher than they
really were.
Right off the bat, he sends his readers down the path of one
of the least contentious practices in banking – facilitation of mergers and
acquisitions. Behind such a transaction
is a buyer and a seller, each able to utilize whatever resources and advisors deemed
necessary to ascertain a fair value of the target opportunity.
On one extreme, perhaps HP just plain overpaid. On the other extreme, the seller committed
some form of fraud in representing the company (I make no such suggestion, only
using the example pointed to by Warner to make the point). In either case, the resolution of this event
belongs to the parties at hand, and if necessary a third party judge or
arbitrator.
Trillions in mortgage fraud, trillions in front-door and
back-door bailouts (none of which are attributable to M&A activity, I
suspect); yet Warner looks for dishonesty anywhere other than the obvious.
Does Warner use this example to throw his readers off of the
scent of the real problem? Perhaps. Then, to add insult to injury, he goes
looking in all the wrong places for solutions.
He summarizes the objectives of global government discussions regarding
reform:
There are two basic aims behind the
international reform effort. One is to ensure that banks can be made safe to
fail and therefore don’t have to be bailed out by taxpayers. The second is to
stop the perceived excesses of the credit cycle by preventing investment
bankers from using ordinary, insured deposits for reckless, casino banking
activities.
He then goes through a list of reasons why banking really
should not be burdened further with regulation, and in any case, he rightly
sees that further government regulation likely will not bring about a solution:
The bottom line is that it is
virtually impossible to legislate for completely safe banking. Nor would you
really want to. For all the undoubted traumas of the credit cycle, fractional
reserve banking has delivered phenomenal economic progress over the past 200
years. To have decent levels of growth, it may be necessary to let finance do
roughly what it wants.
Make banking more robust by all
means, but in the end the sort of relationship banking we all want to see –
honest, responsible and with the customers’ interests firmly back in the saddle
– will come not from lawmakers, but from banks themselves. To judge by the
scandal of Autonomy, there’s a long way to go.
So, the solution is to create better bankers – perfect the
human species, if you will. If only all
men were honest.
There is one problem, and only one problem, with modern
banking. It is a monopoly / cartel
system, allowed by government law and backed by central banks. The banks could never achieve such high
levels of leverage without this government created backstop. They would never grow too-big-to-fail, as
they could never see this leverage in a free-market.
Fractional reserves in some form would certainly continue,
but the regulation brought on by the market would ensure that failure would
occur well before any one bank became so large as to become a systematic risk. Ludwig von Mises certainly saw it this way:
But even if the 100 per cent
reserve plan were to be adopted on the basis of the unadulterated gold
standard, it would not entirely remove the drawbacks inherent in every kind of
government interference with banking. What is needed to prevent any further
credit expansion is to place the banking business under the general rules of
commercial and civil laws compelling every individual and firm to fulfill all
obligations in full compliance with the terms of the contract.
But, some people may ask, what
about a cartel of the commercial banks? Could not the banks collude for the
sake of a boundless expansion of their issuance of fiduciary media? The objection
is preposterous. As long as the public is not, by government interference,
deprived of the right of withdrawing its deposits, no bank can risk its own
good will by collusion with banks whose good will is not so high as its own.
Free banking is the only method
available for the prevention of the dangers inherent in credit expansion. It
would, it is true, not hinder a slow credit expansion, kept within very narrow
limits, on the part of cautious banks which provide the public with all
information required about their financial status. But under free banking it
would have been impossible for credit expansion with all its inevitable
consequences to have developed into a regular - one is tempted to say normal -
feature of the economic system. Only free banking would have rendered the
market economy secure against crises and depressions.
Don’t expect Warner or any other mainstream writer to come
out forcefully in favor if the one single proposal that would achieve the “two
basic aims” identified above:
- Ensure that banks can be made safe to fail and therefore don’t have to be bailed out by taxpayers.
- Stop the perceived excesses of the credit cycle by preventing investment bankers from using ordinary, insured deposits for reckless, casino banking activities.
End the monopoly. End
government support in all forms. End the
government enabled cartel of central banking.
End the Fed.
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