The Value of 'Other People's Money'
BYLINE: By MELVIN I. UROFSKY.
Melvin I. Urofsky is a professor at Virginia Commonwealth University and the author of the forthcoming ''Louis D. Brandeis: A Life.''
LENGTH: 741 words
SOME things never change. When President Obama spoke last week of ''shameful'' bonuses for bankers and the financial community's ''irresponsibility,'' he echoed charges leveled nearly a century ago by Louis D. Brandeis. Brandeis, a commercial lawyer, leading reformer and future Supreme Court justice, described a dangerous combination of avarice, lack of accountability and poor oversight in ''Other People's Money, and How the Bankers Use It,'' one of the best-known exposes of the Progressive era.
Published in 1914, the book was based on the revelations of the House of Representatives' Pujo Committee about the predatory practices of J. P. Morgan and other big bankers. ''Other People's Money'' influenced both Woodrow Wilson's New Freedom agenda and Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal. It also offers valuable lessons for today.
Our current crisis, after all, was in part fueled by bankers making big gambles with other people's cash. They bundled and sold sub-prime mortgages, took their profits, and then left others holding portfolios full of worthless, even toxic, paper. This was exactly the kind of behavior that Brandeis despised. He believed that it was one thing for an individual to put up capital in risky ventures, playing to win but prepared for failure. But he saw the bankers of his time dodging failure by manipulating the marketplace at the expense of smaller entrepreneurs and consumers.
As president, Wilson tried to put a stop to this. He read the book and called Brandeis in to help draft three bills crucial to the New Freedom agenda -- the Federal Reserve Act, the Clayton Antitrust Act, and the law establishing the Federal Trade Commission. These measures allowed Congress to take away banks' control over currency, banned interlocking directorates (in which banker representatives controlled other corporations), and established rules of fair competition.
Banks found it relatively easy to get around these rules in the 1920s, especially with Republican administrations that did not seem to believe in market regulation. Bankers promoted the purchase of stocks on low margins or down payments, often as little as 10 percent of the price, and then financed the difference by loans, while their brokerage divisions sold the stocks. Then the stock market collapsed in the fall of 1929, taking the banking system down with it.
During the Great Depression, people turned to Brandeis once again. ''Other People's Money'' was reissued in an inexpensive edition, and many of those who came to Washington to work on Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal read it. The New Deal laws, particularly the Glass-Steagall and the Securities Exchange Acts, imposed long overdue regulation of the banking system, required the separation of banking from stock brokerage, and established the Securities and Exchange Commission to regulate the stock markets.
For Brandeis, regulation was not supposed to be a restraint on innovation or the entrepreneurial spirit, but rather a check on unbridled greed. He believed in a free market, but one in which the government enforced rules of fair competition so that the most talented could succeed. Clear rules would help ensure that business was conducted fairly and openly.
''Other People's Money'' can help us navigate the new era of regulation that we are likely to enter. It would be wise for Mr. Obama to heed Brandeis's advice before imposing stricter rules on banking and the stock market. For these plans to be effective, Brandeis would caution, they must be more than cosmetic. Government should oppose banks' purchases of stock brokerages, for example, to avoid the problems that Brandeis exposed. Furthermore, new rules won't accomplish much without effective watchdog agencies. The Securities and Exchange Commission, for example, seems to have abandoned its oversight responsibilities during the Bush years, and now, we are paying the price.
As we reel from the financial crisis, ''Other People's Money'' and similar indictments of immoral banking behavior will likely find a new audience. Some of the trouble-making bankers will, perhaps, be temporarily chastened. But before we know it, they will once again be complaining about regulation's ''interference'' with the market. Don't listen to them. Good regulation will keep us from losing sight of the importance of those same principles that Brandeis emphasized so many years ago -- honesty, openness and a fair playing field.
URL: http://www.nytimes.com
LOAD-DATE: February 7, 2009
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company
转一个评论
对“转一个评论”的回应
《别人的钱》热门书评
-
控制大于所有
4有用 0无用 tobylon 2010-05-15
1、公开被得当地推荐为消除社会和工业弊病的补救办法。阳光是最好的消毒剂,灯光是最有效的警察。(公开透明原则与真实披露规定。)2、即使投资银行家没有恶意动机,人性的弱点也会使得对自己应该得到多少无法做出正确的判断。(一定程度上在于掌握的定价权。)3、货币托拉斯联盟,通过投票权信托、连锁董事会以及共有关...
-
转一个评论
3有用 0无用 吃饭很香 2009-04-24
The Value of 'Other People's Money'BYLINE: By MELVIN I. UROFSKY. Melvin I. Urofsky is a professor at Virginia Commonwealth University and the author o...
-
翻译得非常之滥!
2有用 1无用 曾剃头 2012-01-25
封面介绍非常哗众取宠,特地注明“金融危机又会让他们重新拿起这本书!”,让人以为是讲资本操作或者是金融史方面的论著,结果非此。一百多页的书,让小生看了一个多月:食之无味,弃之可惜!两颗星是给布兰代斯的,之所以扣掉三颗星,主要还是因为蹩脚生硬的翻译,随手择几处给大家看看:“因为当公司的重要合同时通过与合...
-
阳光是最好的消毒剂,电灯是最高效的警察
1有用 0无用 古早人 2013-01-10
美国前总统威尔逊最著名的成功,也是最著名的失败应该是他所提出的十四点和平原则。他因此而获得诺贝尔和平奖,然而美国参议院却否决了他提出的美国加入国联的提议。与这一令人津津乐道的历史大事件相比,威尔逊另一个也影响着美国历史进程的事件却不那么为人所知。1912年,为了竞选总统职位,威尔逊提出了包括银行业改...
-
驯服“威胁经济民主的货币托拉斯”
0有用 0无用 21新媒体 2009-11-17
当整个世界都在谴责金融行业的贪婪和不负责任时,法律人通常将这种谴责视为路易斯·D·布兰代斯的世纪回响。在今年年初的《纽约时报》上,《路易斯·D·布兰代斯的一生》(Pantheon,2009年)的作者、弗吉尼亚州立邦联大学的法学和公共政策教授梅尔文·乌罗夫斯基教授撰文表示,布什时代的美国证监会放弃了监...
书名: 别人的钱
作者: 路易斯·D·布兰代斯
出版社: 法律出版社
副标题: 投资银行家的贪婪真相
译者: 胡凌斌
出版年: 2009-1
页数: 126
定价: 26.00元
丛书: 投资经典系列
ISBN: 9787503689635