By Robert Reich
By Clay Bennett, Chattanooga Times Free Press |
Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg’s wealth has ballooned 59 percent. Amazon’s Jeff Bezos’s, 39 percent. Walmart’s Walton family has added $25 billion.
Big
drug company CEOs and their major investors are doing nicely, too. Since
the start of the pandemic, Big Pharma has raised prices on over 250 prescription drugs, 61 of which are being used to treat Covid-19.
Apologists
say this is the “free market” responding to supply and demand – the barons of
Big Tech, online retailing, and Big Pharma merely providing what consumers
desperately need during the pandemic.
But
the market also operates under laws that ban profiteering, price gouging, and
monopolizing, and that tax excess profits in wartime. Where did they go?
The
Trump administration hasn’t enforced them.
Trump
is also ignoring laws that ban trades on insider information. The White House
is distributing billions in subsidies and loans to select corporations –
enabling CEOs and boards to load up on stocks and stock options just before
deals are announced, then rake in fat profits after stock prices surge.
Insiders
from at least 11 companies have sold shares worth over $1 billion after such
announcements, according to an analysis by the New York Times.
In late June, a San Francisco company called Vaxart announced that the Trump administration had selected it to develop a coronavirus vaccine. Presto. The value of stock options distributed to company insiders just weeks before increased six-fold. Stock options held by Vaxart’s CEO went from $4.3 million to more than $28 million.
Moderna,
based in Cambridge, Mass., has never brought a vaccine to market, but company
insiders have sold some $248 million of shares – most of them after the
company was selected in April to receive Trump funding.
(Moderna plans to sell its vaccine for profit although taxpayers have footed
its research and development.)
The
most blatant involves the venerable old camera and film maker, Kodak. On July
28, Trump announced a $765 million deal with the firm to bring drug
production back to the United States. He called it “one of the most important
deals in the history of the U.S. pharmaceutical industries,” even though Kodak
isn’t even a pharmaceutical company.
Before
the announcement, Kodak had handed its board of directors 240,000 stock options, and just the day before had
given its CEO 1.75 million stock options. After Trump’s announcement,
Kodak shares shot up more than 2,757 percent. Suddenly, the board’s stock options were
worth about $4 million, and the CEO’s, about $50 million.
Is
this sort of insider trading against the law? You bet. The Securities and
Exchange Commission is looking into the deal, now temporarily on hold.
But
the SEC’s co-director of enforcement, Steven Peikin, who had been investigating
several of the deals involving the White House and corporate insiders –
including Kodak – has resigned, without explanation. Another in the lengthening
list of independent regulators and inspectors general forced out by Trump?
This
much is clear: Trump and his Republican enablers won’t provide $600 per week to
tens of millions of Americans who need the money to survive the pandemic,
because Trump and the GOP believe the money undermines incentives to
work.
Yet
Trump has no problem letting billionaires illegally profit off the pandemic. He
thinks that as long as they buoy the stock market, they’re helping the American
economy.
That’s
pure rubbish. The stock market is not America. The richest 1 percent of Americans own half the value of all
shares of stock held by American households. The richest 10 percent owns 92 percent. For years now, stock prices
have risen largely because profits have been siphoned from the wages of
ordinary workers.
In
the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, stock prices are almost
back to where they were before the pandemic began. Big corporations and major
investors are doing fine. Billionaires are doing better than ever. But most
Americans are sinking fast.
This
isn’t just unfair. Much of it is illegal.
Robert Reich's latest
book is "THE SYSTEM: Who Rigged It, How To Fix It," out March 24.He is Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley and Senior Fellow at the Blum Center. He served as Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration, for which Time Magazine named him one of the 10 most effective cabinet secretaries of the twentieth century. He has written 17 other books, including the best sellers "Aftershock,""The Work of Nations," "Beyond Outrage," and "The Common Good." He is a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine, founder of Inequality Media, a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and co-creator of the award-winning documentaries "Inequality For All," and "Saving Capitalism," both now streaming on Netflix.