Is Wall Street beyond reform?
http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/insidestoryamericas/2012/03/20123169350625309.html
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Is Wall Street beyond reform? | |||
The high-profile exit of an investment banker has raised questions about the state of reform in the US financial sector.
Inside Story Americas
Last Modified: 16 Mar 2012 11:21
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It is true that Wall Street executives come and go.
But it is the manner of the latest high-profile exit that has made many
sit up and take notice. In an open resignation letter in the New York Times, Greg Smith, the former Goldman Sachs executive, decried what he called the "toxic and destructive" working environment at the firm.
The damning resignation letter came just a day after so-called bank "stress tests" revealed that financial firms were generally in fine health following their brush with disaster. Smith's comments have made many wonder if Goldman Sachs – and the industry as a whole – has learned any lessons from the 2008 crisis and changed its ways. The investment bank was heavily penalised for selling toxic mortgages to investors leading up to the financial crisis of 2008. It also received money from the US government's subsequent multi-billion dollar bank bailout. In his parting shot to Goldman Sachs in the New York Times, Smith said: "The interests of the client continue to be sidelined in the way the firm operates and thinks about making money. He went on to say: "It makes me ill how callously people talk about ripping their clients off. Over the last 12 months I have seen five different managing directors refer to their own clients as 'muppets', sometimes over internal e-mail."
And as long as the US government is so reliant on the Wall Street firms it means to regulate, can meaningful reform occur? Has Wall Street become too big to reform? Or is there a need instead for a radical reordering of the global financial system? Joining Shihab Rattansi on Inside Story Americas to discuss these questions are guests: John Berlau, an economist from the Competitive Enterprise Institute; Marcus Stanley from Americans for Financial Reform; and Felix Salmon, a financial journalist with Reuters.
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Source:
Al Jazeera
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