Wash Indy: “Government Taps Bailout Contractors With Conflicts of Interest”

Continuing with the theme of corruption, obfuscation, crony capitalism and the like with our much maligned bailout, I highly recommend this Washington Independent article on the shady dealings of the private contractors behind the scenes of the more than $12 trillion bailout.

Here’s an excerpt:

As the Wall Street bailout nears its first anniversary, the controversy over giving public money to private banks has become public knowledge. But an equally risky aspect of the financial rescue has flown largely under the radar: the government’s reliance on private contractors – many with potentially significant conflicts of interest – to help revive the stalled economy.

 

The Treasury Department knows that the law firms and investment managers hired to aid its salvage effort could be influenced by their ties to bailed-out banks; in fact, the department released a rule in January aiming to mitigate the problem.

 

That rule, however, has raised questions from watchdogs by asking contractors to identify and police their own conflicts of interest. And a careful review of bailout hiring agreements reveals an inconsistent set of rules applied to the types of private deals that contractors can make while serving as agents of the U.S. government.

 

“It’s just a wonderfully closed circle,” Simon Johnson, former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund and leading critic of the bailout, said in a recent interview.

 

“They’ll sell you on this line that there’s a scarcity of talent,” so contractors must be plucked from Wall Street and remain part of its culture, Johnson continued. “It’s the same argument they’re using to explain why they’re appointing a Goldman Sachs lobbyist as [Treasury Secretary Tim] Geithner’s chief of staff. That’s part of how the club thinks.”

 

Can these contractors guide the bailout with the public interest in mind while simultaneously courting bailout-related business for themselves? It’s tough to say, but imposing greater transparency requirements is crucial, according to more than a dozen financial and legal experts interviewed for this story.

 

Right now, even as more of these lawyers and financiers are helping with the financial rescue, less is being disclosed about their handling of taxpayer-owned assets. Investment managers are setting values for securities that their companies may also hold privately, while law firms are approving government aid for companies they still represent in certain cases – but the public remains almost completely in the dark.

I recommend reading it in full. More bailout writing of my own on the way. Stay tuned.

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