And are ultimately destroying it
July 26, 2013
In every era, there are certain people and institutions that are
held in the highest public regard as they embody the prevailing values of
society. Not that long ago, Albert Einstein was a major public figure and was
widely revered. Can you name a scientist that commands a similar presence
today?
Today, some of the most celebrated individuals and institutions
are ensconced within the financial industry; in banks, hedge funds, and private
equity firms. Which is odd because none of these firms or individuals actuallymake anything,
which society might point to as additive to our living standards. Instead,
these financial magicians harvest value from the rest of society that has to
work hard to produce real things of real value.
While the work they do is quite sophisticated and takes a lot of
skill, very few of these firms direct capital to new efforts, new products, and
new innovations. Instead they either trade in the secondary markets for
equities, bonds, derivatives, and the like, which perform the ‘service’ of
moving paper from one location to another while generating ‘profits.’ Or, in
the case of banks, they create money out of thin air and lend it out – at
interest of course.
Banking was conceived in iniquity and was born in sin. The
bankers own the earth. Take it away from them, but leave them the power to
create money, and with the flick of the pen they will create enough deposits to
buy it back again. However, take away from them the power to create money, and
all the great fortunes like mine will disappear, and they ought to disappear,
for this would be a happier and better world to live in. But, if you wish to
remain the slaves of bankers and pay the cost of your own slavery, let them
continue to create money.
~ Josiah Stamp – Bank of England Chairman, 1920s
Because these institutions and individuals accumulate vast sums
of money for their less-than-back-breaking efforts, they are well respected if
not idolized by most. Many of the most successful paper-accumulators are
household names. They get invited to the best parties, are lured
by major networks to appear on their shows, speak at the biggest conferences,
and their views and words find an easy path to the ears of millions.
But this is more than just an idle set of observations for the
curious. It’s actually a critically important phenomenon to be aware of. For
the current configuration of financially powerful entities has, at the tail end
of a decades-long debt-based money experiment, achieved an astonishing concentration
of power, money, and influence.
We raise this topic because our work centers on changing the
conversation towards the things that really matter while there is still time to
engineer a better outcome, and that requires illuminating the
status quo and having a conversation about whether it needs to be modified.
Unfortunately, those at the center of the status quo are not at all interested
in having any such conversation, because all of their accumulated power depends
on maintaining things as they are.
Money is power.
And history has shown that power is never ceded spontaneously or
willingly.
The Network That Runs the World
A couple of years ago, I came across a study that has stuck with
me ever since and I want to share it with you. It’s really important if we want
to understand the likelihood of a graceful transition for our current society
into a future of prosperity.
Unlike prior studies seeking to quantify the degree of
concentration of wealth and influence, this study simply pored through all of
the available public data to build an empirical map of the network of power.
Its findings are
quite startling and deserve a bit of pondering:
Oct 2011
AS PROTESTS against financial power sweep the world this week,
science may have confirmed the protesters’ worst fears. An analysis of the
relationships between 43,000 transnational corporations (TNCs) has
identified a relatively small group of
companies, mainly banks, withdisproportionate power
over the global economy.
(…)
Previous studies have found that a few TNCs own large chunks of
the world’s economy, but they included only a limited number of companies and
omitted indirect ownerships, so could not say how this affected the global
economy – whether it made it more or less stable, for instance.
The Zurich team can. From Orbis 2007, a database listing 37
million companies and investors worldwide, they pulled out all 43,060 TNCs and
the share ownerships linking them. Then theyconstructed a model
of which companies controlled others through shareholding networks, coupled
with each company’s operating revenues, to map the structure of economic power.
The work, to be published in PLoS One, revealed a core
of 1318 companies with interlocking ownerships (see image). Each of
the 1318 had ties to two or more other companies, and on average they were
connected to 20.
What’s more, although they represented 20 per cent of
global operating revenues, the 1318 appeared to collectively own through
their shares the majority of the world’s large blue chip and manufacturing
firms – the “real” economy - representing a further 60
per cent of global revenues.
When the team further untangled the web of ownership, it found
much of it tracked back to a“super-entity” of 147 even more tightly knit
companies - all of their ownership was held by other members of the
super-entity - that controlled 40 per cent of the total wealth in the
network. ”In effect, less than 1 per cent of the companies
were able to control 40 per cent of the entire network,” says
Glattfelder. Most were financial institutions. The top 20 included
Barclays Bank, JPMorgan Chase & Co, and The Goldman Sachs Group.
Just 147 companies control over 40% of the wealth of the entire
network of companies. It should be pointed out that such a network does not
have any borders and operates on a global basis, meaning that regional
analyses –such as how Germany compares with the U.S. – might
be less relevant than typically portrayed.
After all, if decisions being made by a tightly knit group of
companies are being made to benefit a network that has no borders, then actions
by the German or U.S. governments are only a part of the story. And perhaps a
minor one, compared to those made the entities that actually control the real
wealth of each nation.
It wasn’t that many decades ago that a list of the top companies
with the most wealth and influence would have been dominated by companies that
produced real, tangible products – that is, those that created
wealth by adding value to goods by transforming resources into products.
Companies like GE, GM, IBM, Exxon, and other industrial giants would have been
the wealthiest, because, well, they create actual wealth.
Today the top fifty companies in the ‘super-entity’ list of 147
from the above study is concerning. Out of the fifty, 17 are banks, 31 are an
assortment of investment, insurance, and financial services companies, and only
2 are non-financial companies (Walmart and China Petrochemical)
The top 50 of the 147 superconnected companies
1. Barclays plc2. Capital Group Companies Inc
(Investment Management)3. FMR Corporation (Financial Services)4. AXA
(Investments & Life Insurance)5. State Street Corporation (Investment
Management)6. JP Morgan Chase & Co (Bank)7. Legal & General
Group plc (Investments & Life Insurance)8. Vanguard Group Inc (Investment
Management)9. UBS AG (Bank)10. Merrill Lynch & Co Inc (Bank)11.
Wellington Management Co LLP (Investment Management)12. Deutsche Bank AG
(Bank)13. Franklin Resources Inc (Investment Management)14. Credit
Suisse Group (Bank)15. Walton Enterprises LLC16. Bank of New York Mellon
Corp (Bank)17. Natixis (Investment Management)18. Goldman Sachs Group
Inc (Bank)19. T Rowe Price Group Inc (Investment Management)20. Legg Mason
Inc (Investment Management)21. Morgan Stanley (Bank)22. Mitsubishi UFJ
Financial Group Inc (Bank)23. Northern Trust Corporation (Investment
Management)24. Société Générale (Bank)25. Bank of America Corporation
(Bank)26. Lloyds TSB Group plc (Bank)27. Invesco plc (Investment mgmt) 28.
Allianz SE 29. TIAA (Investments & Insurance)30. Old Mutual Public Limited
Company (Investments & Insurance)31. Aviva plc (Insurance)32. Schroders plc
(Investment Management)33. Dodge & Cox (Investment Management)34. Lehman
Brothers Holdings Inc* (Bank)35. Sun Life Financial Inc (Investments &
Insurance)36. Standard Life plc (Investments & Insurance)37. CNCE38. Nomura
Holdings Inc (Investments and Financial Services)39. The Depository Trust
Company (Securities Depository)40. Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance41. ING
Groep NV (Bank, Investments & Insurance)42. Brandes Investment Partners LP
(Financial Services)43. Unicredito Italiano SPA (Bank)44. Deposit
Insurance Corporation of Japan (Owns a lot of banks’ shares in Japan)45.
Vereniging Aegon (Investments & Insurance)46. BNP Paribas (Bank)47.
Affiliated Managers Group Inc (Owns stakes in 27 money management firms)48.
Resona Holdings Inc (Banking Group in Japan)49. Capital Group International
Inc (Investments and Financial Services)50. China Petrochemical Group Company
(Source)
How is it that companies that produce nothing and only move
digital representations of money from point to point now control far more
wealth than the companies that actually produce the things that makes money
useful at all?
Well, that’s just how the system works. And this is something that
nobody in power wants to talk about.
While we may decide that such as system is just, or unjust, or
evil, or good, such judgments are merely the emotionally laden descriptors we
might assign to a system that – by its very design – accumulates
wealth from the many to the few.
This is why compound money systems have been tried and tried
again, yet have never proved sustainable. Even ancient religious texts
described them as requiring a Jubilee every 7 periods of 7, or 49 years. The
Jubilee, of course, was a reset mechanism that wiped out the inevitable
concentration of wealth so that things could start all over again with a fresh
slate.
An imbalance between rich and poor is the oldest and most fatal
ailment of all republics.
~ Plutarch
So it really should not be any surprise that banks, in
particular – with their extraordinary power to lend money out
of thin air (that’s what ‘fractional reserve’ allows) and their
unlimited-duration corporate lives – are able over time to
accumulate, accumulate some more, and finally end up owning everything.
While we’re not quite there yet, we are well on
the way.
A few are beginning to notice the seeming unfairness of it all,
such as the author of this recent article in The New Yorker:
July 16, 2013
What do these large dollar numbers have in common: $6.5 billion,
$5.5 billion, $4.2 billion, and $1.9 billion? They represent the latest
quarterly net profits made by too-big-to-fail banks—in order, JPMorgan Chase,
Wells Fargo, Citigroup, and Goldman Sachs, the last of which reported its
second-quarter figures before the market opened on Tuesday.
Five years after being bailed out by the federal government, the
U.S. banking system hasn’t merely recovered from the financial crisis that
brought it to the brink of collapse. It is generating record profits—the sorts
of figures usually associated with oil giants like ExxonMobil and Royal Dutch
Shell. During the past twelve months, for example, JPMorgan, the
country’s biggest bank, has earned $24.4 billion in net income.
Let’s begin with trading. In the aftermath of 2008, there was
much talk of banks getting back to basics, which meant concentrating on lending
to businesses and households, and jettisoning many of their investment bankers,
whose generously remunerated antics had helped to bring on the financial
crisis. (…) In the latest quarter, Citigroup’s investment-banking arm
generated more than sixty per cent of the bank’s net profits,
and JPMorgan’s investment bank generated more than forty per
cent of the firm’s net profits.
What exactly did JPM do to ‘earn’ more than $24 billion over the
past 12 months? Did they build millions of appliances? Install thousands of
critical power systems? Build and install high-definition CT scanners?
In fact they did none of these things, which are just three out
of hundreds of accomplishments of GE, which reported a 12-month net profit of
just $17 billion while employing over 300,000 workers.
What JPM did was: trade on the markets, lend to speculators, and
use its inside advantage to skim what it could off of the Fed’s monthly $85
billion of free money. Not that there’s anything illegal with that, but perhaps
we should really be asking ourselves if this truly serves our society to anoint
financial players with the privilege of walking off with the vast majority of
our total national and global income.
Unsustainable Systems Ultimately End
The alarming growing wealth gap in developed nations is a
predictable indicator of the obvious inequities involved in this system. Those
not in the top 1% are finding themselves as modern-day feudal subjects – bound
by debt or lack of property – to a global corporatocracy
(corporations being the new aristocrats).
But the stability of this parasitical system begins to weaken
quickly when the lifeblood it depends on begins to dry up. And that’s when
things can begin to go south in a hurry: a crack-up of the financial system,
civil unrest, government breakdown – that kind of scary
strife.
In Part II: The Indicators of
Instability to Watch For, we discuss the 3 most important danger
indicators to monitor. These are the areas where the cracks will first appear,
and will give those watching closely advance warning to adopt extremely
defensive financial, physical, and emotional positions.
The vast concentration of wealth into so few hands is creating
systemic instability, and if it continues long enough, it will prove to be a
fatal ailment of not just any one particular republic, but all of them.
Click here to read Part II of
this report (free executive summary; enrollment required for full
access)
Copyright © 2013 by Chris
Martenson
Previous article by Chris Martenson: Dangerous Bubble Territory
3 comments:
no surprise should be taken.
for the masses should have felt something was not right.
the bankters own your home with a paper deed,enforce by the police to kick you out when you lose your job.
the BIG banks are the ones who LOAN money to the place you work, so can forclose the jobs you own by your sweat, so by taking the jobs away anytime they want, so as to take ALL OF YOUR real ASSETS because you cannot paid the bankters (kings of old taxes) loans,nor can the job owner pay his loans, because the bankters cut off the need for the factory etc. by building other ones starting up new labor of assets!!!, and so there goes all your assets, because the bankters have the paper deeds that are inforce by the police to do so and you are just one person.
the bankters power tactics is thousand of years old, just follow the money if you dare, and find out who really starts all wars, world, nations depresions, and hunger in the whole world, just for thier enjoyment of something to do, for they have not EVER one day of labor that is for peasants,and servants, and their slave of debt, they just create paper deeds of entiledament to our assets and the labor that creates all of the goods we all make with our labor, and they create the situations thu out history to steal our real property and assets. the banks own our labor and money from thier printing press that has been given total and enforced value out of thin air, then charge us interest to our real money value earned.
Yep, it's much better to serve this master than Almighty God isn't it? It's much better to live under the millions of statues, codes, and regulations of this entity than to accept Almighty God's ten laws isn't it?
What fools we've become in the desire of serving self...we serve the slave master but think we are free.
They deceived us because we've been so busy seeking the desires of the flesh instead of serving our Lord ...the one that created us and loves so much He sent His Son so we truly can be free...but we reject His guidelines for us as rebellious teenagers that reject the wisdom of their parents that love them. God have mercy on us all, forgive us, and deliver us from this evil we've allowed to infect every aspect of our lives and that of our children's future....and more importantly eternity because the spirit does not die when the body perishes. Think about that people, it will spend eternity somewhere!
Reply to Anonymous July 26 at 3:52PM
I say AMEN to that - that is the truth folks.
It is a time to look introspectively at your life and then commit your life of Our Lord Jesus Christ and accept Him as your personal Lord and Saviour. Time is running out fast folks so take action now...
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