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To: lorne who wrote (45003)11/14/1999 2:47:00 PM
From: IngotWeTrust  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116753
 
Hell, Lorne, I'LL POST IT ALL b/c it's re: 1 o'my rav fav love t'hate villains of all times, BillyRubin

Fair use, etc.,

Robert Rubin Rewrites the Rules

Former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin gets cozy with the
banking industry while helping push through a bill freeing
financial institutions to merge into ever larger
megacorporations while largely absolving them of much of
their legal obligation to invest in the communities in which
they do business.

by Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman
Nov. 9, 1999

Few top government officials, whether elected or
appointed, have managed to emerge as unscathed from
the Washington, D.C. spotlight as former Treasury
Secretary Robert Rubin. And Rubin did better than
escape without scratches -- he ended his term of office
with his image enhanced.

Wall Street and the financial press practically beatified
him for his role in overseeing the global economy through
difficult times and working in tandem with Federal
Reserve Chair Alan Greenspan to keep the US economy
working smoothly.

Rubin orchestrated the bailout of foreign bankers and
investors in connection with the Mexican and Asian
financial disasters, and crafted or helped implement
domestic policies that ensured the overwhelming portion
of benefits from economic growth would go to the rich --
but none of this managed to sully the reputation of the
Secretary Rubin.

When he stepped down from his Treasury post this past
summer, Rubin left unfinished a legislative effort to
re-write the nation's banking laws. Misnamed "financial
modernization" legislation was really a deregulatory
initiative -- reminiscent of the S&L deregulation that led
to a corporate crime spree, the collapse of the industry
and the subsequent taxpayer bailout of epic proportions.

The centerpiece of the deregulatory bill, which different
fragments of the finance industry have pushed for a
decade and a half, is the repeal of the revered
Glass-Steagall Act, which bars companies from owning
banks and insurance companies or securities firms at the
same time.

Although powerful interests have long backed the new
legislation, it has repeatedly failed to make it through
Congress because of a maze of intra-industry disputes,
turf fights between different parts of the federal
regulatory structure, and the concerted efforts of
consumer and community development advocates.

Another failure seemed possible or likely this fall,
especially as Senate Banking Chair Phil Gramm,
R-Texas, refused to compromise on privacy and
community development issues.

Another failure, however, was not acceptable to one
company above all -- Citigroup. The product of the
merger between Citibank and Travelers, Citigroup is
operating in apparent violation of the bar on common
ownership of banking, and insurance and securities,
thanks to a loophole that provides for a two-year
transition period.

Enter Robert Rubin. According to a report in The New
York Times, Rubin helped broker the final compromise
language on financial deregulation.

And while he was brokering a deal between Congress and
the White House, he was also, according to The New
York Times account, negotiating his own deal with
Citigroup. A few days after the banking deal was
finalized, Citigroup announced it was hiring Rubin as a de
facto co-chair of the corporation.

This chronology and these arrangements raise serious
issues about whether federal ethics statutes and informal
Clinton administration rules have been violated.

Rubin told The New York Times that he was proud of his
work in preserving the Community Reinvestment Act
(CRA), an important law that requires banks to make
loans in minority and lower-income communities in which
they do business. In fact, the final version of the bill
significantly weakens CRA: It provides for no ongoing
sanctions against holding company banks that fail to meet
CRA standards, it lessens the number of CRA
examinations, and provisions of the bill will discourage
community groups from challenging banks' CRA records.

And the weakening of the CRA is only one element of the
finance industry's deregulatory wish list which is included
in the compromise legislation. The bill will:

pave the way for a new round of record-shattering
financial industry mergers, dangerously
concentrating political and economic power;

create too-big-to-fail institutions that are someday
likely to drain the public treasury as taxpayers bail
out imperiled financial giants to protect the stability
of the nation's banking system;

leave financial regulatory authority spread among a
half dozen federal and 50 state agencies, all
uncoordinated, that will be overmatched by the
soon-to-be financial goliaths;

facilitate the rip-off of mutual fund insurance policy
holders by permitting mutual insurance funds to
switch domicile states -- thereby enabling them to
locate in states where they can convert to for-profit,
stockholder companies without properly reimbursing
policyholders (a conversion of tens of billions of
dollars);

permit the new financial giants to share finance,
health, consumer, and other personal information
among affiliates, compromising consumer privacy;
and

allow banks to continue to deny services to the poor
(Congress rejected an amendment requiring banks
to provide "lifeline accounts" to the poor, so they
would have refuge from check-cashing operations
and the underground economy).

Robert Rubin helped deliver this ticking time bomb of a
bill to Wall Street, first while in Treasury and then while
in negotiations to land a top spot at the finance industry's
largest and highest-profile company. He may well escape
unscathed yet again, but it is sure to blow up on the rest
of us.
mojones.com

Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Corporate Crime Reporter. Robert
Weissman is editor of the Multinational Monitor. They are co-authors of
"Corporate Predators: The Hunt for MegaProfits and the Attack on
Democracy."