Paul Volcker: The Lion Lets Loose - BusinessWeek
Isn't that exactly what they do on Wall Street? They basically say, if you've brought in $50 billion worth of business, then we're prepared to give you a huge income?Sometimes they do it on the basis of stock and sometimes not. That isn't going to solve all the problems, I agree. But you take the trading guy who says: "I brought in $100 million worth of profits, therefore I want $25 million." Have they really taken into account that this trading guy is going on [the firm's] reputation, capital, and risk when he went out there and made the $100 million? If he's so good, let him go out and do it himself. Wall Street has a history of creating financial instruments that will meet any new challenge. Any reason to believe that's going to stop?No. They will continue to try to get around all these restrictions. You have to have a much stronger supervisory and regulatory apparatus to have any chance of keeping up with that. You feel strongly that the financial system has gotten out of whack. Do you think the American political process is capable of fixing it?The American political process is about as broken as the financial system. Therefore, one has to be a bit skeptical. Just to give you one little example, one unrelated to the financial crisis. Here we are on Dec. 29, almost a year after the Inauguration, and there is no Under Secretary of the Treasury. That should be an important position. How can we run a government in the middle of a financial crisis without doing the ordinary, garden-variety administrative work of filling the relevant agencies? The Treasury is an outstanding example of a broken system, but it's not the only one. Is part of the problem that Congress is slow in the process of approving?Slow is too fast a word to describe what's going on. The Administration is one quarter over, and it hasn't manned the ramparts of government yet. So it's the Administration's problem? They haven't gotten their Executive Branch in place?It's partly a reflection of the discord in government and extreme views on either side and fighting each other for every scrap of advantage. In interviews in the past you said that's why we needed to change the political process; that's why you thought that candidate Obama was the best choice for President.True. But has he been able to do that at this point? It doesn't look that way. I think that's unfortunate. I wish the Administration would pay more attention to what's needed to improve the ordinary functioning of government. We can't even fight a war with our own people any more. We've got to hire Blackwater. I think people have lost confidence in government, they've lost trust in government, and it shows. This isn't a question just of this Administration. It's been kind of a steady, downhill path. Yes, but this Administration came in and said it would change. That was the mantra of the campaign. So what happened?It shows you it's not that easy to change.
Isn't that exactly what they do on Wall Street? They basically say, if you've brought in $50 billion worth of business, then we're prepared to give you a huge income?Sometimes they do it on the basis of stock and sometimes not. That isn't going to solve all the problems, I agree. But you take the trading guy who says: "I brought in $100 million worth of profits, therefore I want $25 million." Have they really taken into account that this trading guy is going on [the firm's] reputation, capital, and risk when he went out there and made the $100 million? If he's so good, let him go out and do it himself.
Wall Street has a history of creating financial instruments that will meet any new challenge. Any reason to believe that's going to stop?No. They will continue to try to get around all these restrictions. You have to have a much stronger supervisory and regulatory apparatus to have any chance of keeping up with that.
You feel strongly that the financial system has gotten out of whack. Do you think the American political process is capable of fixing it?The American political process is about as broken as the financial system. Therefore, one has to be a bit skeptical. Just to give you one little example, one unrelated to the financial crisis. Here we are on Dec. 29, almost a year after the Inauguration, and there is no Under Secretary of the Treasury. That should be an important position. How can we run a government in the middle of a financial crisis without doing the ordinary, garden-variety administrative work of filling the relevant agencies? The Treasury is an outstanding example of a broken system, but it's not the only one.
Is part of the problem that Congress is slow in the process of approving?Slow is too fast a word to describe what's going on. The Administration is one quarter over, and it hasn't manned the ramparts of government yet.
So it's the Administration's problem? They haven't gotten their Executive Branch in place?It's partly a reflection of the discord in government and extreme views on either side and fighting each other for every scrap of advantage.
In interviews in the past you said that's why we needed to change the political process; that's why you thought that candidate Obama was the best choice for President.True. But has he been able to do that at this point? It doesn't look that way. I think that's unfortunate. I wish the Administration would pay more attention to what's needed to improve the ordinary functioning of government. We can't even fight a war with our own people any more. We've got to hire Blackwater. I think people have lost confidence in government, they've lost trust in government, and it shows. This isn't a question just of this Administration. It's been kind of a steady, downhill path.
Yes, but this Administration came in and said it would change. That was the mantra of the campaign. So what happened?It shows you it's not that easy to change.
Why oh why didn't Obama choose Volcker instead of Summers to be his chief economic adviser?
The American political process is about as broken as the financial system.
and
I think people have lost confidence in government, they've lost trust in government, and it shows.
Nice and tight, the way I like it. In the end, might makes right. Nothing has changed since the caveman.