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It Takes a Pillage

It Takes a Pillage
September 1, 2009 |

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More by Nomi Prins

Bigger Banks, Riskier Banks
After trillions of dollars in taxpayer funds, cheap loans and other forms of support, the biggest banks are bigger and more complex than ever.
January 28, 2010

Six Principles for True Systemic Risk Reform
A Policy Brief
November 10, 2009

Jacked
How "Conservatives" Are Picking Your Pocket (Whether You Voted for Them or Not)
September 14, 2006

Other People's Money
The Corporate Mugging of America
October 4, 2004

Commentary

Shadow Banking
Reforms pending in Congress would not touch the abuses of hedge funds and private equity.
April 26, 2010
Speculating Banks Still Rule--Ten Ways Dems and Dodd Are Failing on Financial Reform
None of this is reform. We are better off with nada than vapid promises and a false sense of security.
April 14, 2010
Why Can't We Get Anyone to Ask a Wall St. CEO the Hard Questions?
It is exasperating to watch the financial commission in charge of investigating last year's finance disaster be easily distracted and deflected by the bankers who ripped us off.
January 14, 2010
Rebuilding the Wall
Would a new bill bringing back Glass-Steagall prevent another banking meltdown?
December 16, 2009
10 Reasons Bernanke Should Be Fired
From his muddled message on transparency to his failure to anticipate the crisis, Nomi Prins has 10 good reasons for the Senate
December 2, 2009
more articles

Still ticked off at the Federal government doling out trillions to save Wall Street from its own screwups? You're not alone. You have every right to know exactly how the financial disasters of 2008 happened, why the government leapt so quickly to lavish the reckless perpetrators with cheap loans and subsidies that may never be repaid, and what must be done to ensure it never happens again.

In It Takes a Pillage, former Wall Street insider turned muckraking journalist Nomi Prins argues vehemently and convincingly that the current crisis has almost nothing to do with subprime mortgages and everything to do with a financial system that rewards people who move money instead of people who make things, operates outside of the media's gaze, is sheltered from governmental supervision, and uses leverage to turn risky deals into insanely risky deals.

You'll find out how the revolving door between Wall Street and Washington enabled and encouraged the disastrous behavior of large investment banks. You'll meet the Pillage People: the men who funneled trillions of dollars directly to the banks and the executives whose companies drained the American economy. You'll learn which of the Federal Pillage Triumvirate pirated the biggest part of a $10.7 trillion bountyHank Paulson, Ben Bernanke, or Timothy Geithner. You'll decide which private-sector pillager took the biggest share of spoilsBank of America head Ken Lewis in his unholy alliance with former Merrill Lynch chief exec John Thain, who extracted $225 billion from the public; former AIG exec Joseph Cassano, who banked $315 million, leading the division that nearly drowned AIG before it hooked a $182 billion federal life raft; or Robert Rubin, whose public- and private-sector decisions decimated financial restraint and landed Citigroup in a $388 billion hole.

Prins also takes you on a harrowing tour of the Wall Street mind-set, in which making money is a game and colossal paychecks are a way of keeping scoreand getting a huge bonus after churning out fabricated securities and taking out the entire world economy might be the biggest win of all.

The scariest part is that for all the trillions that have been spent or committed to the bloated stalwarts of Wall Street, our economic system remains in disarray. Prins demonstrates that this failure stems from flaws not in these institutions, but in the banking system itself. She shows how irresponsible deregulation whetted both individual and institutional appetites for short-term gain, and produced an addiction to greed and power that still rules the markets even after nearly destroying them.

Complete with a savvy and well-developed proposal for extracting ourselves from this downward financial spiral and stabilizing the economy, ItTakes a Pillage is packed with all the information you need to understand the financial crisis and identify policies that will solve the problem, rather than make it more severe.

View Prins' Bailout Tally Report and Subsidization Chart

(right click, and 'save link as' to download)

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Tags: Business Ethics Distribution of Wealth & Income Home Loans and the Mortgage Meltdown Lending Industry Market Economy Financial Reform Wall Street

News & Press

Excerpt: Searching for Whitopia by Rich Benjamin
December 7, 2009
The Pillage People
One year after the Wall Street bailout, real reform of the financial sector is still a dream.
October 30, 2009
Former Wall Street Player Reveals the Inside World Behind Shady Bailouts to Bankers
An Interview with Nomi Prins
October 30, 2009
A Tale of Two Bailouts
It's not the best of times for housing.
September 24, 2009

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