WE NEED BETTER, NOT MORE, INFORMATION
By Roberto
Savio (*)
ROME, Jun (IPS) Not long ago we were convinced
that the more information we had the more aware
we would be as citizen and the more likely to
make informed decisions at the polls. Today it
seems the more information we have, the ore
questions we have. Ultimately, rather then
feeling more secure, we feel more uncertain.
A few examples. How many remember when Julian
Assange declared shortly before his arrest that
Wikileaks was going to release the full
documentation of how an important American bank
had committed fraudulent practices that led it
to the verge of bankruptcy, from which only
state intervention rescued it. The US government
is about to wrap up its second bank rescue
operation, after the 750 billion bailout by the
Bush administration. An estimated 2.3 trillion
dollars has been invested worldwide to save the
financial sector.
Months have passed and
there hasn’t been a peep about this story.
Without a doubt, documentation of the financial
system’s responsibility for a crisis that has
affected hundreds of millions of people globally
(the International Labour Organisation
calculates it has pushed more than 40 million
people into poverty) is more damaging for
governments than the gossip from American
embassies. We ask ourselves: what ever happened
with that?
We now know a lot about
the fraudulent and completely unprofessional
practices that led to the financial crisis. A
number of banks paid significant penalties to
avoid criminal trials that they were sure to
lose. And yet the major US banks paid out in its
traditional end-of-the-year bonuses an
astounding 20 billion dollars as if nothing had
happened.
When a sector commits
criminal acts that force part of humanity into
misery and drive the rich countries into a
suicidal race to fight fiscal deficits (not
social deficits), one might think that those
responsible would be punished. And yet as of
today criminal charges have been filed against
only one Wall Street player -only one: Fabrice
Tourre, a young Frenchman and a lowly vice
president at Goldman Sachs. which paid a 550
million dollar fine to avoid going to court.
Tourre is accused of having “created a deceitful
system of selling mortgages". He ran a section
of Goldman Sachs under Jonathan Egon, who was
the inventor of the fraudulent scheme. Tourre’s
defence showed that he was one of the least
important members of a team of at least 15
people. The company transferred Tourre to London
last year where he is on paid vacation and is
making no statements. A question arises
inevitably: What is the logic of this story?
But this question can be
seen as a product of the strategy of the
financiers and their lobbies to convince the
public of their complete innocence. They argue
that the Great Recession that we are still
suffering through was not caused by their
fraudulent practices but by market fluctuations
that simply contributed to the formation of a
bubble. According to them, there were but a
handful of instances of wildly excessive
speculation, like that of Bernie Madoff, who
deliberately swindled his clients out of 40
billion dollars and was rightly condemned to
over two hundred years in prison. They would
have us conclude that the financial system is
solid, healthy, efficient, and responsible.
Perusal of the Madoff case
unearths a disgraceful fact: the entity with
jurisdiction over such crimes, the Security
Investor Protection Corporation, hired the law
firm of Baker and Hostetler, to liquidate
Madoff’s properties and use the proceeds to
compensate his victims. This effort has produced
thus far 318 million dollars and Judge Burton
Lifland just granted the lawyers a fee of 43.2
million dollars just for the period from October
2010 to January 2011. The liquidator, Irving
Picard, earned 713,799 dollars for the same
period. What kind of justice is served when sums
like these are subtracted from the funds
intended for the victims?
Unfortunately there is no
answer, or at least no credible relevant
information available in the media, to a
question like this, which is one of many
regarding the behaviour of bankers and the
oversight entities who brought about the
economic catastrophe of these years.
The real problem is that
citizens have less and less trust in the
institutions and tend to suspect that the many
illogical or incomprehensible developments are
part of a plot.
The conclusion is this: we
don’t need more information but better and more
trustworthy information. This would give us all
more peace of mind. (END/COPYRIGHT IPS)
*Roberto
Savio is founder and
president emeritus of the Inter Press Service
(IPS) news agency and publisher of Other News.