How Goldman Controls The New York Fed

Om den danske stats samarbejdspartner Goldman Sachs Efter finanskrisen blev der foretaget en undersøgelse af Federal Reserves handlinger

_slettet_bruger_14060 Ikke angivet,

29/09/2014

Om den danske stats samarbejdspartner Goldman Sachs

Efter finanskrisen blev der foretaget en undersøgelse af Federal Reserves handlinger. Konklusionen var:

It's an extraordinary document. There is not space here to do it justice, but the gist is this: The Fed failed to regulate the banks because it did not encourage its employees to ask questions, to speak their minds or to point out problems.

Just the opposite: The Fed encourages its employees to keep their heads down, to obey their managers and to appease the banks. That is, bank regulators failed to do their jobs properly not because they lacked the tools but because they were discouraged from using them.

The report quotes Fed employees saying things like, "until I know what my boss thinks I don't want to tell you," and "no one feels individually accountable for financial crisis mistakes because management is through consensus." Beim was himself surprised that what he thought was going to be an investigation of financial failure was actually a story of cultural failure.

I 2012 blev Carmen Segara ansat med opgaven at overvåge Goldman Sachs. Hun stillede for mange spørgsmål og blev fyret. Før hun blev det havde hun dog optaget flere samtaler.

The job right from the start seems to have been different from what she had imagined: In meetings, Fed employees would defer to the Goldman people; if one of the Goldman people said something revealing or even alarming, the other Fed employees in the meeting would either ignore or downplay it. For instance, in one meeting a Goldman employee expressed the view that "once clients are wealthy enough certain consumer laws don't apply to them." After that meeting, Segarra turned to a fellow Fed regulator and said how surprised she was by that statement -- to which the regulator replied, "You didn't hear that."

This sort of thing occurred often enough -- Fed regulators denying what had been said in meetings, Fed managers asking her to alter minutes of meetings after the fact -- that Segarra decided she needed to record what actually had been said. So she went to the Spy Store and bought a tiny tape recorder, then began to record her meetings at Goldman Sachs, until she was fired.

At Wall Street og Federal Reserve er korrupt kan ikke undre nogen og det kan vel heller ikke undre nogen at Goldman Sachs egentlig passer perfekt til den danske stat. Krage søger mage.