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Thursday, July 1, 2010

How Wall Street steals from us with the help of the government

Let’s talk about the 401k. It was never intended to be a replacement for the pension plan but slowly and quietly corporate America has made it so. I don’t really see the return of the pension plan nor do I believe pensions are all that great of an option. I do, however, think it is time to stand up and fight against the criminal enterprise that the modern 401k has become.

Investing, investment banks and stock markets came into being as a way to put money where it will be best used. Those with excess cash used these vehicles to put money into entities that needed cash to create or expand businesses. In return for that cash investors were rewarded with a piece of the action. Banks and brokers took a modest fee for doing the deal and paperwork. Simple enough.

What this has grown into is so far from the original need and intent it is hardly recognizable. In fact only a small percentage of today’s investment activity is centered on capitalization of business. The vast majority of activity is simply moving money around in the effort to collect more money from others. I intentionally do not use the phrase “make money”. Money is not “made” by this activity, it is simply transferred from one entity to another. Some call this socialism although we are used to hearing about money moving from the few to the many. In this case most often money is transferred from vast numbers of small investors into the pockets large investment companies. Computerized high speed trading is the preferred vehicle for this activity though there are others. Small investors and even large funds do not have access to this sort of equipment and are therefore excluded from the game. The playing field is unequivocally tilted in favor of the big players. This sort of “investing” hinges on having a vast number of relatively low tech, naïve investors putting money into the system for the inside players to feed on.

Enter the government and our tax deferred 401k contributions. This program is carefully engineered to get you to keep those funds flowing into our stock market system. You can’t invest that money ANY other place and retain the tax deferred status a 401k enjoys. Not in your own business, education, home improvement or any other place you might get a return. You can only put it in the stock market (or cash I suppose). I charge that this is a complicit and intentional collaboration between Wall Street and our government with the nefarious intent of feeding the financial sector machine. You can’t throw a stone in DC without hitting a former financial sector alumni now working in our government. Yes, I think that matters. The attempted privatization of SS was another shot at getting YOUR money in a place where the financial industry could get at it. Do you think they will manage that money for free? Even if all they skimmed was 1% that amounts to billions in profits not earned, but moved from each and every taxpayer into the coffers of the investment corporations. It is a redistribution of wealth to the top of the pyramid from the bottom. Corporate socialism is what I will call this. While done behind closed doors in the most corrupt of nations our system is far more sophisticated: we engineer government policy so it can be done out in the open.

So what do we do? This system, once again, usurps the free market concept. In a free market we would be allowed to invest our dollars wherever we want that provided the best return (for the individual). Instead we are told where we must invest OUR dollars. If the restriction to investing within the financial sectors products were lifted imagine the howling you would hear from their lobbyists – the very people who scream the loudest about maintaining open and free markets. There needs to be a mechanism that allows us to use this tax deferred money in a way that most benefits the individual, not the financial sector. I don’t really know what that mechanism is but I am working on it. If you have ideas, let me know.

2 comments:

  1. I say holding onto CA$H is the best way to go.....

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  2. Here’s what I don’t get about the financial system: How many times have you heard a news anchor start a sentence with “Stock prices fell amid speculation” or “nervous investors sold off…” It seems like the world economy is dependent on the emotional whims of Wall Street. Every time there’s a new government report or a storm in Djibouti or a gossipy article in the Washington Post, my retirement account loses 3% of its value- all because some twat in a $2000 suit gets jittery. Seriously? Who on earth are these people? What kind of whiny little bitches are they hiring in the financial sector? Apparently, they can’t handle pressure very well. If the executive class wants to have power over the rest of the world economy, perhaps they should develop a little more intestinal fortitude. All I can say is that it’s a darn good thing that they don’t do what I do for a living.

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