Oren Cass, The Finance Industry Is a Grift. Let’s Start Treating It That Way. NYTimes, Feb. 6, 2026.
From the article:
Less than 10 percent of Goldman’s work in 2024, measured by revenue, was helping businesses raise capital. Loans of Goldman’s own funds to operating businesses accounted for less than 2 percent of its assets. At JPMorgan Chase the figures were 4 and 5 percent; at Morgan Stanley, 7 and 2 percent. Even the efforts at helping to raise capital are misleading, because less than a tenth of it goes toward building anything new. The rest funds debt refinancing, balance sheet restructuring and mergers and acquisitions.
These are symptoms of financialization. That’s the term for making financial markets and transactions ends unto themselves, disconnected from — and often at the expense of — the societal benefits that support human flourishing and are capitalism’s proper purpose. Chief among those benefits are good jobs that support families, and products and services that improve people’s lives.
In a financialized economy, businesses become mere sources of cash, assets to be manipulated and then operated for maximum investor returns. Workers become just another cost, like lumber. Customers are just revenue streams to be tapped.
Financialization has made American businesses less resilient, less innovative and less competitive. It has been a major cause of slow wage growth and rising inequality. It has fueled the loss of manufacturing jobs across the heartland. It has corrupted sectors in which the profit motive was never meant to reign supreme — veterinary practices, funeral parlors, campgrounds, residential treatment services, youth sports, hospitals and nursing homes, even suppliers for volunteer fire departments — consolidating and managing them with ruthless efficiency, squeezing their vulnerable customers and then pointing to the higher cash flow as “value creation.”
Later:
It’s the absurd endpoint of financial nihilism: an entire business model built on gaming the system without knowing or even caring what’s being traded. Along the way, it increases market volatility and risk without producing any larger benefit.
Private equity firms control trillions of dollars, very little of which is invested directly in companies that will use the funds to grow. (Venture capital is the exception to this general rule; that’s real investment in growing businesses, though concentrated in a few industries and places.)
Homo economicus at work:
The Excel spreadsheets have always seemed to give the same answer: Do not invest in shipyards, or semiconductor fabs, or research and development for a new airplane. Do cut costs, offshore to Asia, increase the dividend or invest in the social media company that could be the unicorn worth billions in a matter of months.
There's much more at the link.
"There's much more at the link." as covert / dog whistling propaganda. Driving with Henry Clay (born 1777) as the director!
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely financialization.
As some wag said, show me the money.
Oren Cass, who takes funding via American Compass, from;
"Funded by / Ownership
American Compass ... However, external sources confirm notable funders:
• The Rockefeller Foundation: Awarded a $225,000 grant in 2023 to support American Compass’s Program on Productive Markets, which focuses on economic decoupling from China, industrial policy, financial regulation, taxation, and immigration reform.
• Other Funders: According to InfluenceWatch, American Compass has also received funding from organizations like The Hewlett Foundation and The Omidyar Network.
• The organization is also listed as part of the advisory board for Project 2025, a Heritage Foundation initiative to restructure the federal government to align with conservative policies.
https://mediabiasfactcheck.com/american-compass-bias-and-credibility/
And American Compass is driving policy by looking in the rear view mirror... "modern update on the “American system” of nineteenth-century American statesman Henry Clay" [2] Henry Clay Born in 1777.... "helped found both the National Republican Party and the Whig Party.". Wikipedia
[2] "American Compass is a think tank which considers itself a part of the “conservative labor movement.” American Compass was founded by Oren Cass, a former advisor to then-U.S. Senator Mitt Romney’s (R-UT) presidential campaigns and a labor and environmental policy analyst. In American Compass’s founding letter, Cass describes the organization’s ideology as a modern update on the “American system” of nineteenth-century American statesman Henry Clay predicated on national industrial policies, protectionism, pro-union labor policies, and domestic economic regulations intended to encourage the growth of domestic industry and increase wages in an equitable manner. 1".
https://www.influencewatch.org/non-profit/american-compass/
"American Compass was founded by Oren Cass, a former advisor to then-U.S. Senator Mitt Romney’s (R-UT) presidential campaigns and a labor and environmental policy analyst. In American Compass’s founding letter, Cass describes the organization’s ideology as a modern update on the “American system” of nineteenth-century American statesman Henry Clay predicated on national industrial policies, protectionism, pro-union labor policies, and domestic economic regulations intended to encourage the growth of domestic industry and increase wages in an equitable manner. 1
https://www.influencewatch.org/non-profit/american-compass/
Bonus; politics a bands. Henry Clay as...
"So Lincoln was just another backup guitarist. But he was playing backup to Henry Clay, and Clay was an incredibly talented performer. Later Lincoln would absolutely copy a bunch of Clay’s favorite riffs. Of course Lincoln would eventually find his own sound, but the Debate album is just one Henry Clay chord change after another, and you can still hear it right into “Inaugural I”.
"A slightly belated celebration of President’s Day
by DOUG MUIR on FEBRUARY 21, 2025
“America is rock and roll.” — Alfred Howard
https://crookedtimber.org/2025/02/21/a-slightly-belated-celebration-of-presidents-day/
SD
So you're in favor of financializatiion, then?
Delete