A 'Mortal Danger' to our economic security

by Susan Marie Kovalinsky | October 12, 2009 at 06:28 am
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The financial sector is a monster poised to devour us.  


"The financial sector - including the big insurance companies - has morphed into a cancer growing on our economy - a cancer that could easily strangle our prospects for our long-term economic security."


~Robert Creamer,  Huffington Post,  October 12,  2009

Huffington Post's Robert Creamer makes his case for the 'mortal danger'  of the dominant financial sector in America:

Doubling its size in the last 14 years,  this sector now poses a monstrous and fatal threat to the financial security of millions of Americans and to the U.S. as a free nation. 

Over the last several decades, the financial sector has grown relentlessly. It has doubled in size over the last 14 years. During the period 1973 to 1985 the financial sector never earned more than 16% of domestic profits. This decade, it has averaged 41% of all the profits earned by businesses in the U.S. In 1947 the financial sector represented only 2.5% of our gross domestic product. In 2006 it had risen to 8%. In other words, of every 12.5 dollars earned in the United States, one goes to the financial sector, much of which, let us recall, produces nothing.

That growth has not been among community or regional banks -- or credit unions. I'm talking about Wall Street.

Wall Street's growth is one big reason that most of America's economic growth during the last decade has flowed into the hands of investment bankers, stock traders and partners in firms like Goldman Sachs. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities reports that fully two-thirds of all income gains during the last economic expansion (2002 to 2007) flowed to the top 1% of the population. And that, in turn, is one of the chief reasons why the median income for ordinary Americans actually dropped by $2,197 per year since 2000.

No surprise then that disproportionate numbers of the "best and brightest" graduates of our finest universities headed off to Wall Street. After all, that's where if you are very clever you can make tens of millions of dollars before you are thirty - mostly producing nothing.

By 2007 the top 50 hedge and private equity fund managers averaged $588 million in annual compensation each - more than 19,000 times as much as the average U.S. worker. And by the way, the hedge fund managers paid a tax rate on their incomes of only 15% -- far lower than the rates paid by their secretaries.



Read more at: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-creamer/the-dominance-of-the-fina_b_317310.html

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