I put this
WSJ article in today’s The Day Ahead, however it
deserves special attention as it reveals how a handful of banks
are grabbing market share previously unheard of in American
history, notwithstanding simplistic social studies textbooks
about Progressive era robber barons and fanciful talk about
greedy corporations precipitating the Great Depression. As it
reads:
“Bank of America, J.P. Morgan and Wells Fargo now
have 33% of all U.S. deposits, up from 21% in mid-2007-the
fastest shift of such a large chunk of deposits in U.S.
history. (emphasis added)…
The three huge banks made 57% of all home mortgages in the
first quarter, up from 28% in 2008.”
The recession clobbered (and still is clobbering) small and
community banks, many of which become consumed by the big boys.
Let’s not forget that the Federal government gave tens of
billions of dollars in stimulus to these large banks and they
dutifully used their government largesse to outlast, runout, or
buyout their competition. To be fair, big banks can
offer services like ATM and online checking that better suit
consumers than small banks. But this unprecedented rise, coupled
with the new finreg which promises to impose debilitating
compliance and transactions costs that fall disproportionately
hard on smaller operations, risks creating a financial landscape
where a few oligopolies run the whole show. That in turn
practically begs for an unholy alliance between banks and the
government, a relationship already emerging out of the new
financial regulation. Or take health care reform and insurance
companies as another example. It’s quite a cozy arrangement, big
companies allow the government to regulate their competitors out
of existence and in exchange give government the political
support, not least of which financial, to prop up the Washington
machine and the status quo. There is a lot of talk about how the
White House is “anti-business.” Obama’s agenda is not to destroy
enterprise in America, it’s to co-opt it into bed with
government. That way Democrats can direct the resources of
businesses in accordance with their socially just, eco-friendly
worldview without going through the messy process of riding
roughshod over the Constitution and nationalizing key industries.
Heck, it worked for Wilson and FDR.