By
Robert Reich
What
exactly does it mean for a big Wall Street bank to plead guilty to a serious
crime? Right now, practically nothing.
But
it will if California’s Santa Cruz County has any say.
First,
some background.
Five
giant banks – including Wall Street behemoths JPMorgan Chase and Citicorp –
recently pleaded guilty to criminal felony charges that they rigged the world’s
foreign-currency market for their own profit.
This
wasn’t a small heist. We’re talking hundreds of billions of dollars worth of
transactions every day.
The
banks altered currency prices long enough for the banks to make winning bets
before the prices snapped back to what they should have been.
Attorney
General Loretta Lynch called it a “brazen display of collusion” that
harmed “countless consumers, investors and institutions around the globe — from
pension funds to major corporations, and including the banks’ own customers.”
The
penalty? The banks have agreed to pay $5.5 billion. That may sound like a big
chunk of change, but for a giant bank it’s the cost of doing business. In fact,
the banks are likely to deduct the fines from their taxes as business costs.
It’s
“an embarrassment to our firm, and stands in stark contrast to Citi’s values,“
says Citigroup CEO Michael Corbat.
Values?
Citigroup’s main value is to make as much money as possible. Corbat himself
raked in $13 million last year.
JPMorgan
CEO Jamie Dimon calls it "a great disappointment to us,” and says “we
demand and expect better of our people.”
Expect
better? If recent history is any guide – think of the bank’s notorious “London
Whale” a few years ago, and, before that, the wild bets leading to the 2008
bailout – JPMorgan expects exactly this kind of behavior from its people.
Which
helped Dimon rake in $20 million last year, as well as a $7.4 million
cash bonus.
When
real people plead guilty to felonies, they go to jail. But big banks aren’t
people despite what the five Republican appointees to the Supreme Court say.
The
executives who run these banks aren’t going to jail, either. Apologists say
it’s not fair to jail bank executives because they don’t know what their rogue
traders are up to.
Yet
ex-convicts often suffer consequences beyond jail terms.
In
many states they lose their right to vote. They can’t run for office or
otherwise participate in the political process.
So
why not take away the right of these convicted banks to participate in the
political process, at least for some years? That would stop JPMorgan’s Dimon
from lobbying Congress to roll back the Dodd-Frank act, as he’s been doing
almost non-stop.
Why
not also take away their right to pour money into politics? Wall Street banks
have been among the biggest contributors to political campaigns. If they’re
convicted of a felony, they should be barred from making any political
contributions for at least ten years.
Real
ex-convicts also have difficulty finding jobs. That’s because, rightly or
wrongly, many people don’t want to hire them.
A
strong case can be made that employers shouldn’t pay attention to criminal
convictions of real people who need a fresh start, especially a job.
But
giant banks that have committed felonies are something different. Why shouldn’t
depositors and investors consider their past convictions?
Which
brings us to Santa Cruz County.
The
county’s board of supervisors just voted not to do business for five years with
any of the five banks felons.
The
county won’t use the banks’ investment services or buy their commercial paper,
and will pull its money out of the banks to the extent it can.
“We
have a sacred obligation to protect the public’s tax dollars and these banks
can’t be trusted. Santa Cruz County should not be involved with those who
rigged the world’s biggest financial markets,” says supervisor Ryan Coonerty.
The
banks will hardly notice. Santa Cruz County’s portfolio is valued at about $650
million.
But
what if every county, city, and state in America followed Santa Cruz County’s
example, and held the big banks accountable for their felonies?
What
if all of us taxpayers said, in effect, we’re not going to hire these convicted
felons to handle our public finances? We don’t trust them.
That
would hit these banks directly. They’d lose our business. Which might even
cause them to clean up their acts.
There’s
hope. Supervisor Coonerty says he’ll be contacting other local jurisdictions
across the country, urging them to do what Santa Cruz County is doing.
ROBERT B. REICH, Chancellor’s Professor of Public Policy at
the University of California at Berkeley and Senior Fellow at the Blum Center
for Developing Economies, was Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration.
Time Magazine named him one of the ten most effective cabinet secretaries of
the twentieth century. He has written thirteen books, including the best
sellers “Aftershock" and “The Work of Nations." His latest,
"Beyond Outrage," is now out in paperback. He is also a founding
editor of the American Prospect magazine and chairman of Common Cause. His new
film, "Inequality for All," is now available on Netflix, iTunes, DVD,
and On Demand.