There's No Recovery Because the Government Made it Official Policy Not to Prosecute Fraud

Friday, July 8, 2011

Fraud caused the Great Depression and it has caused the current financial crisis. http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2010/10/ ... -this.html But fraud is not not being prosecuted, and so it will occur again and again, and prevent a sustainable economic recovery.

Numerous economists have been saying this for years. As I pointed out in March: http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2011/03/ ... ry-is.html

Nobel prize winning economist George Akerlof has demonstrated http://www.examiner.com/economic-policy ... risis-1993 that failure to punish white collar criminals - and instead bailing them out- creates incentives for more economic crimes and further destruction of the economy in the future. Indeed, William Black notes that we've known of this dynamic for "hundreds of years". http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2011/02/ ... risis.html

Now mainstream journalists are starting to catch on.

Market Watch senior columnist Brett Arends writes: http://www.marketwatch.com/story/the-ne ... 2011-07-06

No one has been punished. Executives like Dick Fuld at Lehman Brothers and Angelo Mozilo at Countrywide, along with many others, cashed out hundreds of millions of dollars before the ship crashed into the rocks. Predatory lenders and crooked mortgage lenders walked away with millions in ill-gotten gains. But they aren’t in jail. They aren’t even under criminal prosecution. They got away scot-free. As a general rule, the worse you behaved from 2000 to 2008, the better you’ve been treated. And so the next crowd will do it again. Guaranteed.

Gretchen Morgenson and Louise Story point out in the New York Times that: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/08/busin ... .html?_r=1

As the financial storm brewed in the summer of 2008 ... Federal prosecutors officially adopted new guidelines about charging corporations with crimes — a softer approach that, longtime white-collar lawyers and former federal prosecutors say, helps explain the dearth of criminal cases despite a raft of inquiries into the financial crisis.

Though little noticed outside legal circles, the guidelines were welcomed by firms representing banks. The Justice Department’s directive, http://www.justice.gov/dag/readingroom/ ... 282008.pdf involving a process known as deferred prosecutions, signaled “an important step away from the more aggressive prosecutorial practices seen in some cases under their predecessors,â€