Okay, President Obama. Here is the solution to the rating
service conundrum: get rid of them. The S&P is not a divinely
established entity. It is owned by the publisher, McGraw-Hill. Who
in its office does the “rating”? Anybody know? We know this: the
first figures provided by S&P to the treasury department
contained a 2-trillion dollar error! It was corrected and then the
S&P downgraded America’s rating from triple A to double A-plus,
an act described by Secretary Geithner as evincing “terrible
judgment.”
Stockholders are paying for the S&P judgment in a big
way. The Dow Jones closed down 634.76.
Secretary Geithner had intended to leave his Washington
job and return to New York City, but he relented at Obama’s urging
and announced he is staying on as Secretary. So, here is the
solution:
President Obama and Secretary Geithner hold a joint
conference-announcement in the White House and declare the S&P
“null and void” — no longer applicable to the nation’s credit
rating. Uncle Sam has always paid his debts, they point out, and
will continue to do so. Ditto for the other rating services. Who
needs them? Who appointed them? True, the banks will miss that
triple-A stamp affixed to various sheets of paper as signs of
worthiness, but heck, they can attest to the validity of their crap
themselves without the mystery attachment.
This announcement will serve an ancillary purpose: it will
respond to the growing belief that Mr. Obama is weak, a patsy, a
plaything for the various components of the U. S. Congress. It will
reassert his authority.
And the upcoming 12-member commission assigned the job of
rounding out the Debt Ceiling measure will have yet more power —
authority to endorse the President and Secretary’s abandonment of
the concept of unknown sanctifiers of the U.S. obligations. The
word of the United States should be, and is, enough. Always has
been and always will be.