Who’s “Socialist?” Those Too-Big-to-Fail Banks — Still

The Largest U.S. Banks Remain Too-Big-to-Fail The largest U.S. banks remain Too-Big-to-Fail (TBTF). Their structure is thoroughly “socialist.” Political rhetoric in some circles seems to define “socialism” as any involvement of the government and the taxpayer in citizens’ lives. The U.S. banking structure is socialism for the richest. It also exacerbates the widening of income…

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BREAK ‘EM UP: Ten Reasons to Isolate Taxpayers from TBTF Systemic Banks

Commercial banking and investment banking are fundamentally different businesses. Each may stand between those who have money to spare and those who need to borrow it, but their risks, time horizons, and compensation practices differ widely. As Glass-Steagall barriers between the two were dissolved beginning in 1987, the largest banks took higher risks, backed by…

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BREAK ‘EM UP!: Creating Systemic TBTF Banks

Most folks outside the financial services industry (and many within) have the mistaken impression that the elimination of Glass-Steagall barriers between investment and commercial banking occurred in one legislative move. The true truth is that the barriers were first eroded by Federal Reserve actions, instigated by big U.S. commercial banks over a decade earlier than…

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