Today's Congressional boo-hooing about TARP oversight

Mon Mar 09, 2009 at 08:20:19 AM PDT

This WaPo article gives me a lot to comment about.

Congressional investigators are criticizing the Obama administration for failing to police deals in which banks participating in the $700 billion federal bailout lent billions of dollars overseas, highlighting the growing political tension over the extent of government involvement in firms receiving taxpayer funds.

This might be a legitimate gripe. But in the context of everything I've said about the weakening of Congressional oversight over the past -- I don't know... decade, now? -- it seems more than a little ridiculous for Congress to be griping about a lack of oversight by the executive.

This part, too, bugs me:

Under the bailout's largest program, only the 20 largest recipients of money are required to file reports with the program's overseers, the report said, while the other 297 are not. The investigators also said that Treasury has not deployed personnel to any of the largest participants, other than a minimal presence at two. Even the filings required of the 20 largest recipients provide general monitoring of the bailout money's impact on lending activities, not the overall use of the taxpayer dollars, the subcommittee concluded.

"As a result, Treasury has limited ability to detect or prevent waste and abuse," the report concludes.

Again, I understand the frustration in general, but the fact that there's so little in the way of on the ground oversight brings me back to this bold assertion from Max Baucus (D-MT) during the TARP debate:

For the taxpayers' sake, I also wrote a provision creating a special watchdog to track and protect taxpayers' dollars. I have said that American resources must be used wisely and efficiently. This bill includes my proposal to create an independent Inspector General to oversee this effort. This effort and nothing else. Solely designed [sic] on this problem. I designed the office of this Inspector General to be truly independent, with the necessary resources to fight for every taxpayer dollar. I designed this Inspector General to be accountable only to the Congress and to the American taxpayer. It will be my personal ambition to make sure that this watchdog does his or her job. I want this Inspector General on the ground, in New York, inside the firms that facilitate Treasury auctions, watching every dollar that comes and goes. This investigator will hear from the Finance Committee as we work to protect the American people's interest in this effort.

Well? Where are your IGs on the ground, inside the firms, Senator?

"I wrote."

"My proposal."

"I designed."

"My personal ambition."

"I want."

That's a whole lotta you in there, Senator. So what are you gonna do about it? Word is, the president's looking for another $750 billion, too. That's putting a lot of the onus on Max Baucus, of course, when there are dozens of Members of Congress who are equally responsible for this lack of oversight and enforcement, not to mention the dozens of other areas in which there has been an equal lack. But boy, was that speech ever full of personal assurances that we were in good hands. And it turns out... not so much. Where should I turn?

Second thing that's bugging me:

The report underscores the political strain between some lawmakers, who are pressing for much more government involvement in banks that receive federal assistance, and officials at the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve, who say it is impractical and counterproductive to approve every aspect of a bank's operation.

The overseas deals by the banks were not illegal, the report concluded, and it is impossible to know whether they were funded with bailout dollars.

It probably is impractical (and maybe counterproductive) for the government to be approving every aspect (or even a great deal) of a bank's operations. And yes, because money is fungible (and we knew this going in, because it's axiomatic) it's impossible to know exactly what happens to TARP dollars. But that's why a gigantic, carte blanche bailout was such a trainwreck waiting to happen. You can't honestly sell a $700 billion, hands-off bailout as being specifically targeted at anything in particular, so to have sold it first as something designed to vacuum up all the "toxic assets" out there, then later as something designed to loosen credit markets (presumably here in the United States, it should have gone without saying), was an obvious lie and we all should have recognized it as such. Is there a sector more ideologically resistant to government scrutiny/interference than high finance?  Their entire operational philosophy is that it's impossible for outsiders to pin down where they'll put their capital from day to day or hour to hour. And not just that it's impossible, but that even if it were possible, it'd be detrimental to their operations to tell anyone what they were doing before they did it, because it would lessen their relative advantage in being a first mover.

So yes, it's arguably impractical and counterproductive to approve bank operations at the level necessary to effectively oversee the use of TARP funds. Pretty much by definition. Which means your two choices are either to admit that and live with it, or not bail the banks out.

Well, the third option is actually to bail them out and lie to yourself about oversight, I guess. And we went with that one, and will likely do it again.

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Tags: TARP, bailout, Max Baucus, oversight (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

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  •  TARP=$700B+minor oversight. Fed=$2T+NO oversight (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    bigchin, hikerbiker

    Terry Gross had Elizabeth Warren on today's Fresh Air.  Warren is a Harvard Law professor who was drafted to chair the Congressional Oversight Panel which is supposed to monitor TARP.  She's a good explainer, a pro-consumer moderate IMO, and has been on Fresh Air in the past to help explain the crisis.

    She gave some harsh criticism of Paulson's use of the first $350B of TARP funds, which was interesting enough and would be what I'd post here because it directly addresses this diary, and anyone interested would benefit from hearing what she had to say.  [For example, Paulson got sub-par 66cents-on-the-dollar deals for the taxpayer while private money from Dubai and Warren Buffet got themselves better-than-par deals, plus Paulson lied about it.]

    But then Warren said that the $700B of TARP money (with its figleaf of oversight) is dwarfed by the $2 Trillion that the Federal Reserve is spending on the bailout with zero oversight.

    Personally, I'm just blown away by that.

    Streaming audio of Warren segment is here.  Podcast (whole Fresh Air episode) is here.

    •  Zero oversight. Infuriating!!! (0+ / 0-)

      I heard that today and it wrecked my day.  Thanks for posting the links.  You beat me to it.  Everyone needs to hear this.  

      Kagro:  How do we make sure this stops???  Please keep us informed about who to call on this and when... It feels like we've all been asleep at the wheel while they steal our money right out of our pockets!

      Consider adopting a homeless pet at PAWS.org (Progressive Animal Welfare Society)

      by hikerbiker on Mon Mar 09, 2009 at 03:36:01 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

      •  If we had been asleep at the wheel... (1+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        bigchin

        we'd feel better rested.

        As it is, we've been wide awake, but strapped into the passenger's seat.

        I'm not sure how you stop this one. The Fed is an odd duck, and it will require some heavy lifting to bring it under any kind of direct federal government control. If that's even what we want.

        •  ok. We're awake. But completely passive. (1+ / 0-)

          Recommended by:
          bigchin

          To continue with the silly metaphor...We're obviously not the ones driving this, but every day we hear more about the friggin TRILLIONS that are or will be unaccounted for and we do     ?what? about it???  Please guide us, here.  Is there no way for people to make their wishes known?  I wrote that it feels like we're asleep because every day we get nudged awake with more bad news, always when it's already too late to do anything about the latest, greatest, most disasterous mistake.  

          Maybe I'm the only kid in this class who doesn't understand the Fed...Who controls the Fed?  They dole out two TRILLION with NO OVERSIGHT and there's no way for citizen's to object?  What are they, some new independently functioning fourth branch of govt, hiding deep within the Soviet empire?

          It's so frustrating and disappointing to see that this can continue to happen on Obama's and a Dem-controlled Congress' watch.  Why are they not insisting on intense oversight, every step of the way?  Don't concerned citizens have a role to play, now, in pushing for this?  

          Consider adopting a homeless pet at PAWS.org (Progressive Animal Welfare Society)

          by hikerbiker on Mon Mar 09, 2009 at 09:52:36 PM PDT

          [ Parent ]

  •  "Obama's administration?" Wasn't this legislation (0+ / 0-)

    enacted by the Bush misadministration? And now it's Obama's fault?

    And wasn't there some little add on by the Bushies at the last minute that somehow got everything out from under? I wish I could recall it now but I recall it got yells of outrage at the time.

    Plus the raucous Baucus put in outraged oversight as

    I want this Inspector General on the ground, in New York, inside the firms that facilitate Treasury auctions, watching every dollar that comes and goes. This investigator will hear from the Finance Committee as we work to protect the American people's interest in this effort.

    But that's just watching Treasury auctions – which I would think just tell whose buying the T–bills. It does not say that IG's forces should be on the ground in the Banks overseeing the Banks operations!

    Maybe I got it wrong but that seems like a toothless tiger – and I'll bet Baucus was laughing all the way to the bank.

    And why are we stuck with Bernacke? I know he has a term but can't anything be done? This is the guy who was blithering about inflation last July. HE didn't see this clusterfuck coming?

    What the hell? Is there no competence in the US of A?

    Get Stieglitz in there or???  Get anyone who doesn't think that those earning multi-millions are Kings of the universe.

    Shit, put Soros in and stand back and watch the heads explode.

    I'm asking you to believe. Not in my ability to bring about real change in Washington ... I'm asking you to believe in yours. Barack Obama

    by samddobermann on Tue Mar 10, 2009 at 10:41:48 AM PDT

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