Pundits are shocked at the prospect of taxpayers bailing out companies whose middle managers are distraught if their year-end bonuses come to less than seven figures. After all, deregulation and global competition was supposed to banish the cozy relationship between big business and big government that justifies corporate welfare under the slogan "Too Big to Fail."
But a look just south of the border -- where Citigroup has also been making headlines -- reminds us that crony capitalism is not some anomaly that rears its hypocritical head in times of financial crisis. It is built into the DNA of multinational banking.
US megabanks seek a subprime bailout, and one, Citigroup, just
gamed the system quite lucratively in Mexico. It's how the world's
taxpayers bail out the too-big-to-fail corporations.
On October 17, the Mexican government announced that a syndicate
organized by Banamex, Citigroup's Mexican subsidiary, had bid for and
won at auction Aeroméxico, the country's largest airline. Having bailed
out Aeroméxico's former owners eighteen years ago, the government owned
a majority of the company's stock, which it was now privatizing.
The
news was accompanied by photo-ops of smiling bureaucrats shaking hands
with happy plutocrats from the Citigroup/Banamex syndicate. Frontman
for the syndicate is José Luis Barraza, a major fundraiser for Mexican
President Felipe Calderón. Barraza financed the vicious campaign attack
ads against leftist candidate Andrés Manuel López Obrador, which were a
major factor in Calderón's narrow and possibly fraudulent victory last
year. A Mexican court later acknowledged that the ads were illegal but
with a straight face declared that they didn't affect the outcome of
the election -- won by 0.5 percent of the vote.
Shortly
after the announcement of the Aeroméxico sale, it leaked out that
Citigroup/Banamex had not been the highest bidder. Less than three
minutes after its bid, the government was offered a higher price by a
group headed by a businessman to whom the Mexican president did not owe
any favors. The Calderonistas disqualified the higher bid on the
grounds that it had come too late, i.e., after a deadline that
Citigroup/Banamex had insisted the government impose. The decision
violated the law, which forbids arbitrary closing of a privatization
auction under such circumstances. When the losing bidder was asked if
he was going to sue, he declined. He had plenty of evidence the deal
was rigged, he said, but the fix was in, and there was no way he could
beat the Citigroup-government alliance in a Mexican court.
As
one Mexican newspaper put it, Citigroup/Banamex got control of an
entire airline for practically the price of one new advanced-design
airplane. Moreover, at least part of the money Citigroup/Banamex is
paying the Mexican government for Aeroméxico comes from huge subsidies
the bank is already receiving from -- you guessed it -- the Mexican
government.
In 1982, when the peso crashed, the government
bought Banamex as a way of rescuing the bank and its Mexican owners
from bankruptcy. In 1991 Mexican President Carlos Salinas resold it for
$4.6 billion to a business group headed by a close ally, Roberto
Hernández. Two years later Salinas signed the North American Free Trade
Agreement, which included a timetable for dismantling Mexico's law
against foreign ownership of its commercial banks. The foremost
champion of NAFTA in the Clinton White House was economic adviser
Robert Rubin, formerly co-chair of Goldman Sachs. When another peso
crisis hit Mexico in 1994, Rubin, then US Treasury Secretary, financed
a bailout of the Wall Street holders of Mexican bonds. As part of the
complex deal, Salinas's successor, Ernesto Zedillo, agreed to
accelerate the opening up of Mexican banks to foreigners.
At
the same time, Zedillo rescued the Too Big to Fail Banamex by buying
its largely worthless portfolio of uncollectible loans -- on credit.
Mexican taxpayers are still paying Banamex interest for the government
purchase of the bank's junk securities a dozen years ago. The exact
amount of the subsidy is buried in obscure government accounting, but a
2004 estimate was that the government still "owed" Banamex roughly $4
billion.
In 2003, the Mexican government subsidy to the
banking industry -- by then almost totally owned by foreign
corporations -- was three times what it was spending on roads, school
buildings, health facilities and other infrastructure. This, in a
country where 42 percent of the people don't earn enough to support a
minimum Mexican market basket of food, clothing and other essentials.
In
1999, Rubin resigned as Treasury Secretary to become chair of the
executive committee of Citigroup. Two years later, shortly after the
date on which Mexico had to open up its banks to foreign ownership,
Rubin flew to Mexico to buy Banamex for $12.5 billion plus a seat on
the Citigroup board for Hernández. The Mexican press reports that the
well-connected Hernández masterminded the Aeroméxico deal, which will
provide Citigroup/Banamex with substantial revenues from financing
airplane leases and insurance, along with being the preferred banker
for the airline's suppliers.
As the icing on this very
lucrative cake, the Calderón government decided that the
Citigroup/Banamex gang should not have to pay the normal sales tax.
Sales taxes, it was explained with a straight face, really fall on the
seller, not the buyer -- try this out next time you go to the store --
and since the seller was the government, there is no point in the
government paying the sales tax to itself. Neat. No wonder the
Citigroup board just elected Rubin to be its chair.
So here
is your global free enterprise system -- a k a socialism for the rich
-- at work: Citigroup/Banamex, which is Too Big to Fail in the United
States, has also been deemed Too Big to Fail by the Mexican government
and is being subsidized by Mexican taxpayers to buy Aeroméxico, also
Too Big to Fail.
The World Bank, IMF and other neoliberal
hangouts are still pushing developing countries to open up their
financial markets to multinational banks, precisely on the grounds that
it will eliminate crony capitalism. The idea, you see, is that these
global wheeler-dealers will bring First World standards of competence
to the Third World.
And so they have: Banamex, like its
Citigroup owner, just posted a massive loss for the last quarter. It
seems Banamex has also been pushing subprime loans, via credit cards,
to people who don't earn enough to pay them back. Citigroup, by the
way, operates in more than 135 countries. Taxpayers of the world: Hold
on to your wallets.
Jeff Faux was the founder of and
is now distinguished fellow at the Economic Policy Institute. His
latest book is The Global Class War (Wiley).
Copyright © 2007 The Nation
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Word Count: 1,077
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