| Herr Henkel’s Hall of Shame | | Drucken | |
| 06.02.2010 |
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William K. Black, Professor für Ökonomie und Recht, antwortet auf die Replik von Hans-Olaf Henkel zum Interview mit James K. Galbraith. Mit scharfen Worten weist er die Vorwürfe Henkels zurück und weist auf Rassismus hin.
Der frühere BDI-Chef Hans-Olaf Henkel reagiert auf Kritik von James K. Galbraith, der in einem Interview mit MMnews in Hinblick auf die Ursachen der Finanzkrise Henkel Inkompetenz vorwirft. Henkels Replik (auf Galbraith: Henkel "inkompetent" ) löst in den USA nun Wellen der Empörung aus, da er sich auf alte diskriminierende Regelungen beruft (sogenanntes "red lining"), deren Aufhebung unter anderem der Auslöser der Krise gewesen seien. Der Professor für Ökonomie und Recht an der University of Missouri, Bill Black, lässt die Klarstellung von Hans-Olaf Henkel nicht unkommentiert stehen. In einem aktuellen Beitrag auf New Economic Perspectives – siehe: http://tiny.cc/tsu1O - geht Black mit Henkel hart ins Gericht. Herr Henkel’s Hall of ShameWilliam K. Black Associate Professor of Economics and Law University of Missouri – Kansas City Hans-Olaf Henkel was one of the primary German architects of the global financial crisis in his capacity as leader of the association that lobbied on behalf of Germany’s large businesses. He has written recently that a number of the CEOs running those businesses should be placed in a “Halle der Schande” (Hall of Shame). One hopes that he will find his continued association with them congenial when he his given the most prominent pedestal in that Hall. Herr Henkel was the leading German business proponent of deregulation and the executive compensation systems that drove the global crisis. He brought a special passion to denouncing German tendencies toward social equality and the resulting cultural limitations on executive compensation. The government and equality were the twin evils and when the government sought to increase equality the combination was Henkel’s ultimate nightmare. It was certain, therefore, that he would blame the global crisis on government efforts to reduce discrimination against working class, particularly minority, Americans. It was equally certain that he would be enraged when Professor Galbraith refuted this claim. Herr Henkel replied: Mr. Galbraith should familiarize himself Jimmy Carter's "Housing and Community Development Act" where in Section VIII Banks were prohibited the practice of "red lining" which until then enabled them to distinguish "better living quarters" and "slums". It is not common to read nostalgia about the good old racist days when the government (the FHA) and businesses worked together to prevent loans from being made to blacks. Herr Henkel has an interesting concept of causality. His “logic” is that blacks, not the denial of home loans, caused “slums.” Banks, naturally, did not loan to blacks because blacks lived in slums. They drew “red lines” on maps around “slums” where they would not lend. Then came what Herr Henkel terms the “do-goodism” among politicians that banned the red lining of integrated and black neighborhoods (aka, “slums” in Henkel’s world view). The Fair Housing Act of 1968 (passed under President Johnson) outlawed redlining. Under Henkel’s “logic” it, after over a 30-year latency period, caused the global financial crisis. Black borrowers (“slum” dwellers all) destroyed the global economy. And Jews caused Germany to lose World War I by stabbing it in the back. But it gets better. Herr Henkel claims that he is on a mission to fight a blood libel. He is enraged that opponents of the disastrous financial system smear (Verunglimpfen) that system on the basis of the wrongdoing of the CEOs leading our most elite banks. This makes his casual, fact-free, smear of blacks all the more appalling and hypocritical.
http://tiny.cc/tsu1O
Bill Black is an
associate professor of economics and law at the University of Missouri
– Kansas City (UMKC). He was the executive director of the Institute for Fraud
Prevention from 2005-2007. He has taught previously at the LBJ School of Public
Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin and at
Santa Clara University,
where he was also the distinguished scholar in residence for insurance law and
a visiting scholar at the Markkula
Center for Applied
Ethics. He was litigation director of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, deputy
director of the FSLIC, SVP and general counsel of the Federal Home Loan Bank of
San Francisco,
and senior deputy chief counsel at the Office of Thrift Supervision. He was
deputy director of the National Commission on Financial Institution Reform,
Recovery and Enforcement. Black developed the concept of “control fraud,"
in which the CEO or head of state uses the entity as a “weapon.” Control frauds
cause greater financial
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