Saturday, December 10, 2011

Entitled to Steal

Robert Reich:
For years Wall Street has speculated like mad in futures markets – food, oil, other commodities – causing prices to fluctuate wildly. The Street makes bundles from these gyrations, but they have raised costs for consumers.
In other words, a small portion of what you and I pay for food and energy has been going into the pockets of Wall Street. It’s just another hidden redistribution from the middle class and poor to the rich.
The new Dodd-Frank law authorizes the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to limit such speculative trading. The commission considered 15,000 comments, largely from the Street. It did numerous economic and policy analyses, carefully weighing the benefits to the public of the new regulation against its costs to the Street. It even agreed to delay enforcement of the new rule for at least a year.
But this wasn’t enough for the Street. The new regulation would still put a crimp in Wall Street’s profits.
So the Street is going to court. What’s its argument? The commission’s cost-benefit analysis wasn’t adequate.
Lots of commentators have been complaining about how the Occupy crowd is spoiled and feels entitled to have everything given to them.  I think they must have learned from Wall Street.  The bankers feel entitled to extract rents from the rest of society, regardless of whether their "work" adds any economic value or not (generally not).  Not only have they extracted rents, they've increased the percentage of the economy they have grifted out.  The political stupidity which Reich describes in the rest of the article is just the demonstration of that sense of entitlement.

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