Got Money If You Want It...
Electric_Delta
Posts: 977
I am by no means a fan of Bernie Sanders, but he does raise some excellent points here.
WASHINGTON—Sen. Bernie Sanders (I., Vt.) has a slew of questions for Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke in the wake of new emergency-lending data the central bank released last week.
In a letter Monday to Mr. Bernanke, the senator who played a leading role in getting the Fed to unveil the loan data is demanding access to more information—including certain Fed officials' emails and phone logs as well as new details on the securities banks pledged in exchange for cheap loans.
Mr. Sanders asked about potential conflicts of interest between bank executives and Fed officials, and he asked the Fed to explain its rationale for lending to foreign banks.
He also wants to know exactly how much money the Fed lent to millionaires and billionaires during the financial crisis. He specifically asked for information on loans given to businessman H. Wayne Huizenga, billionaire hedge-fund manager John Paulson, Dell Inc. founder Michael Dell and Christy Mack, the wife of former Morgan Stanley chief executive John Mack and dozens of other borrowers.
"The emergency response appears to any objective observer to have been a clear case of socialism for the rich, and rugged free-market capitalism for everyone else," the Vermont Independent wrote. "Much of the information that you have provided on your website raises bigger questions than it answers, and some of the information mandated by the law appears to be missing."
A Federal Reserve spokesman Monday afternoon said the Fed has received the letter and plans to respond to it.
Sen. Sanders, a self-described socialist who tends to vote with Senate Democrats, also wants to know how much money the Fed lent to investment funds located in tax-haven areas such as the Cayman Islands.
In addition, he questioned the "massive levels" of financial aid to foreign governments and banks. "Why did the Federal Reserve bail out the Korea Development Bank, the wholly state-owned bank of South Korea, by purchasing over $2.2 billion of its commercial paper?" he asks Mr. Bernanke in the letter.
On Wednesday the Federal Reserve released data on thousands of transactions during the financial crisis, showing that the central bank made trillions of dollars of loans to a host of companies, including to foreign banks. Goldman Sachs Group Inc., General Electric Co., Verizon Communications Inc. and the European Central Bank were among the big names that came to the Fed for assistance.
The Fed posted the data online to comply with a disclosure provision that Sen. Sanders put into the Dodd-Frank financial-regulatory overhaul enacted earlier this year. Fed officials said it was the biggest release of crisis lending data that a central bank has ever done.
Still, Sen. Sanders pledged to keep pushing for changes he said will make the central bank more responsive to the needs of ordinary Americans and businesses.
Sen. Sanders made clear in the letter that he is disturbed by the hundreds of billions of dollars of short-term loans that went to foreign banks. He questioned Fed transactions with Bavaria and Bahrain, concerned that foreign governments and banks received loans while the economic downturn continues to weigh on small businesses and families in the U.S.
"At a time when hundreds of thousands of Americans have had their jobs shipped to Mexico, why did the Federal Reserve extend over $9.6 billion to the Central Bank of Mexico," Sen. Sanders asked in his letter.
He also wants to know why the Fed assisted companies including Toyota Motor Corp. and Honda Motor Co. at a time when the American automobile sector was struggling.
Sen. Sanders argued that the Fed withheld details on the securities companies pledged as collateral. "I am disappointed that the Fed chose not to disclose all of the specific details on individual securities pledged as collateral by recipients of some $885 billion in emergency lending," he wrote. "I urge you to put this information on your website immediately."
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142 ... And_Policy
WASHINGTON—Sen. Bernie Sanders (I., Vt.) has a slew of questions for Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke in the wake of new emergency-lending data the central bank released last week.
In a letter Monday to Mr. Bernanke, the senator who played a leading role in getting the Fed to unveil the loan data is demanding access to more information—including certain Fed officials' emails and phone logs as well as new details on the securities banks pledged in exchange for cheap loans.
Mr. Sanders asked about potential conflicts of interest between bank executives and Fed officials, and he asked the Fed to explain its rationale for lending to foreign banks.
He also wants to know exactly how much money the Fed lent to millionaires and billionaires during the financial crisis. He specifically asked for information on loans given to businessman H. Wayne Huizenga, billionaire hedge-fund manager John Paulson, Dell Inc. founder Michael Dell and Christy Mack, the wife of former Morgan Stanley chief executive John Mack and dozens of other borrowers.
"The emergency response appears to any objective observer to have been a clear case of socialism for the rich, and rugged free-market capitalism for everyone else," the Vermont Independent wrote. "Much of the information that you have provided on your website raises bigger questions than it answers, and some of the information mandated by the law appears to be missing."
A Federal Reserve spokesman Monday afternoon said the Fed has received the letter and plans to respond to it.
Sen. Sanders, a self-described socialist who tends to vote with Senate Democrats, also wants to know how much money the Fed lent to investment funds located in tax-haven areas such as the Cayman Islands.
In addition, he questioned the "massive levels" of financial aid to foreign governments and banks. "Why did the Federal Reserve bail out the Korea Development Bank, the wholly state-owned bank of South Korea, by purchasing over $2.2 billion of its commercial paper?" he asks Mr. Bernanke in the letter.
On Wednesday the Federal Reserve released data on thousands of transactions during the financial crisis, showing that the central bank made trillions of dollars of loans to a host of companies, including to foreign banks. Goldman Sachs Group Inc., General Electric Co., Verizon Communications Inc. and the European Central Bank were among the big names that came to the Fed for assistance.
The Fed posted the data online to comply with a disclosure provision that Sen. Sanders put into the Dodd-Frank financial-regulatory overhaul enacted earlier this year. Fed officials said it was the biggest release of crisis lending data that a central bank has ever done.
Still, Sen. Sanders pledged to keep pushing for changes he said will make the central bank more responsive to the needs of ordinary Americans and businesses.
Sen. Sanders made clear in the letter that he is disturbed by the hundreds of billions of dollars of short-term loans that went to foreign banks. He questioned Fed transactions with Bavaria and Bahrain, concerned that foreign governments and banks received loans while the economic downturn continues to weigh on small businesses and families in the U.S.
"At a time when hundreds of thousands of Americans have had their jobs shipped to Mexico, why did the Federal Reserve extend over $9.6 billion to the Central Bank of Mexico," Sen. Sanders asked in his letter.
He also wants to know why the Fed assisted companies including Toyota Motor Corp. and Honda Motor Co. at a time when the American automobile sector was struggling.
Sen. Sanders argued that the Fed withheld details on the securities companies pledged as collateral. "I am disappointed that the Fed chose not to disclose all of the specific details on individual securities pledged as collateral by recipients of some $885 billion in emergency lending," he wrote. "I urge you to put this information on your website immediately."
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142 ... And_Policy
Bristow, VA (5/13/10)
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Comments
This article was a revelation to me in some ways. If everything written in the letter was true, our money went to several incredibly inappropriate places.
By the way, I realize that happens all the time, but the audacity lies in their timing. It's like slapping the taxpayers in the face.
thank you reagan, asshole. and thatcher.
and Obama is continuing it in a way, privatizing nasa....
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-11518049
its a rape of the treasury, a corporate handout. tax payers dollars given to the extremely wealthy.