Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Congress would be unable to resist the urge to start making banking decisions once they agreed to put up $700 billion to help save the banking system

TO BE NOTED:


May 13, 2009, 1:06 pm

Why Governments Shouldn’t Run Banks

The most depressing story I’ve read in awhile was one in Tuesday’s New York Times, entitled “Workers Pressure Banks To Keep Clothier’s U.S. Plants Open.” The bank in question is Well Fargo, which of course was the unhappy recipient of government bailout funds, to the tune of $25 billion — money it claims it never needed and now cannot give back. The clothier in question is Hartmarx, which makes Hart Schaffner & Mark as well as Hickey Freeman suits.

Hartmarx is bankrupt. Wells Fargo, its banker, does not believe that lending it more money makes any sense since, as it put it in a statement, “it has no reasonable likelihood of being repaid.” Companies in this position are usually liquidated. But Hartmarx is one of the few remaining clothing companies that makes its suits in America, employing 3,600 mostly unionized workers.

So naturally, the union is pressing Wells Fargo to find a buyer instead of overseeing a liquidation — a buyer, no less, who will keep the company’s U.S. operations going (even though, presumably, the union cost structure is one reason the company is broke). What is the union’s leverage? Why, of course: it is the fact that Wells Fargo took bailout money. The union argues that because Wells Fargo is a ward of the Treasury Department, it has a responsibility to do what’s right for the country, and not just for the bank. And it has a staunch ally in Representative Phil Hare of Illinois, who once worked at Hartmarx, and vowed that if Wells Fargo allowed the company to be liquidated he would be “their worst nightmare.”

“You need to stand up for the American worker, like Congress stood up for the banks when times were tough.”

This is exactly what many conservatives feared when the bailout bill was pushed through last fall — that Congress would be unable to resist the urge to start making banking decisions once they agreed to put up $700 billion to help save the banking system. But while it’s one thing to try to rein in executive compensation (which, frankly, I don’t have a problem with), it is quite another to begin making lending demands. Let’s face it: banks got into this fix in large part because they made sloppy, ill-advised lending decisions, giving money to people, and companies, that couldn’t pay it back. In effect, the union and Mr. Hare are now demanding that Wells Fargo make, well, a sloppy, ill-advised lending decision. The purpose of the loan might be different than it was during the bubble, but the result will be the same: more money will be lost, and the bank will be weaker.

There are, without question, thousands of cases where small businesses that are perfectly healthy are seeing their credit lines frozen or withdrawn by suddenly frightened bankers. But this isn’t such a case. Hartmarx is a crippled company. Wells Fargo’s needs to make a business decision that will help make the bank healthier not weaker. If Mr. Hare gets his way, and if other representatives start making similar demands — as they surely will — the bailout money is going to wind up being a noose around the necks of the banking system."

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