Financial Magic Thinking Dies Hard
from Consortium News:
Financial Magic Thinking Dies Hard
March 7, 2012
Since the early supply-side days of Ronald Reagan, the Right has pretended that slashing taxes on the rich will generate extra revenue, thus more than paying for itself. The reality has turned out differently, but Michael Winship says that hasnt changed the determination to bend reality to politics.
By Michael Winship
Facts are stubborn things, said founding father John Adams, a basic truth Ronald Reagan famously mangled at the Republican National Convention in 1988, when he tried to quote Adams and declared, Facts are stupid things, before correcting himself.
Nonetheless, in practice, certain of our financial and political leaders seem to embrace Reagans verbal misstep as closer to reality than Adamss original aphorism. Witness the resistance on the part of banking institutions and certain members of the congressional leadership, despite regulations demanding that they allow facts and figures to be reported, information that could keep us from the edge of yet another economic meltdown.
The March 5 Wall Street Journal reported that as the Federal Reserve prepares to release the results of the latest round of stress tests, evaluating how banks would respond in the event of another severe financial crisis, Bankers are pressing the Fed to limit its release of information expected as early as next week to what was published after the first test of big banks in 2009.
Three years ago, as the financial crisis was abating, the Fed published potential loan losses and how much capital each institution would need to raise to absorb them. This time around, the Fed has pledged to release a wider array of information, including annual revenue and net income under a so-called stress scenario in which the economy would contract and unemployment would rise sharply. ...............(more)
The complete piece is at:
http://consortiumnews.com/2012/03/07/financial-magic-thinking-dies-hard/