“You have to
distinguish between two things – the economy and the stock market. The economy is the sum of all the goods and
services that are produced in the country every day. The stock market is something very
different. There is no economy and no
production of goods and services. There
are only fantasies in which people from one hour to the next decide that this
or that company is worth so many billions, more or less. It doesn’t have a thing to do with reality or
the economy.” – Stieg Larsson
As the century turned from the 19th into
the 20th, America was in the so-called Progressive Era and Europe was in its
Belle Epoque, both part of the Age of Imperialism that ended with the Great War
known also as World War I. This timeline
goes to 2016.
1901: The new century
begins with a stock market crash resulting from struggles between E.H.
Harriman, Jacob Schiff, J.P. Morgan, and James Hill for control of Northern
Pacific Railway, resulting in all the big rivals being gathered into the
Northern Securities Company by James Stillman and William Rockefeller with
Standard Oil money.
1904: The Northern
Securities Company is dissolved under the provisions of the Sherman Antitrust
Act of 1890, a law previously used primarily against labor unions.
1907: The stock
market crashes in the bankers’ panic of that year, but J.P. Morgan averts even
worse disaster through his personal fortune and influence.
1913: The Federal
Reserve Act creates a national banking system to prevent another catastrophe
like the Panic of 1907 happening again without a J.P. Morgan around to pull
everyone’s arses out of the fire.
The 16th Amendment to the Constitution,
authorizing an income tax, is passed.
The Revenue Act establishes a rate of 7% on the top tax bracket.
1914: The Federal
Trade Commission Act prohibits unfair or deceptive business practices and
creates the FTC.
1917-1919: American
involvement in World War I.
1918: The tax rate for the top bracket reaches a
war-time high of 77%.
1920-1921: Depression.
1921: With the
inauguration of William Harding as POTUS, Herbert Hoover becomes Secretary of
Commerce and absolute master of all federal policy and programs, assisted by
HIS choice for Secretary of the Treasury, Andrew Mellon. Besides de-regulation of business, tax rates
are lowered five times, with the top rate eventually reaching 21%. Hoover’s tenure in the executive branch ends
with him as POTUS, presiding over the decay of the American economy in the
aftermath of the Roaring ‘20s.
1929-1942: The Great
Depression.
1932: Congress
raises the top tax rate to 63% over Hoover’s veto.
1933: Franklin
Delano Roosevelt becomes POTUS and launches the New Deal.
The Banking, or Glass-Steagall, Act sponsored
by Sen. Carter Glass (D-Virginia) and Rep. Henry Steagall (D-Alabama) creates
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), separates “commercial banks”
focusing on consumer activities (checking, savings) from “investment banks”
dealing with speculative trading and mergers, institutes rules on handling conflicts-of-interest,
and bars a bank holding company from owning other financial companies.
1934: The National
Labor Relations (Wagner) Act supports the formation of labor unions, collective
bargaining, and the right to strike; amendments to the Railway Labor Act of
1925 do the same for railroad and airline employees.
The National Housing Act creates the
Federal Housing Administration (FHA) and the Federal Savings and Loan
Corporation (FSLIC).
1935: The Social
Security Act provides Retirement, Survivors, and Disability Insurance,
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, and Unemployment Insurance. Amendments in 1965 add Medicare and Medicaid.
1936: The
Commodities Exchange Act regulates all futures and commodities trading.
1938: The Fair Labor
Standards Act mandates a national minimum wage, an 8-hour workday, and overtime
pay for work beyond 8 hours, and outlaws child labor.
1941-1945: U.S.
involvement in World War II.
1944: The G.I. Bill
provides a fund for veterans to attend college and supporting funds for institutions
of higher education.
1945-1971: The Golden Age
of Capitalism.
1945: The Revenue
Act reduced the tax rate for the top bracket from its war-time 94% to 91%,
where it remained throughout most of the so-called Golden Age of Capitalism.
1947: The Labor and
Management Relations (Taft-Hartley) Act limits the Wagner Act by allowing
so-called “right-to-work” laws; prohibiting jurisdictional strikes, wildcat
strikes, solidarity strikes, political strikes, secondary boycotts, mass
picketing, closed shops, and monetary donations to federal campaigns; and
restricting union shops. It also authorized the federal government to
enact strike-breaking in the name of “national security” along with forbidding
communists and socialists from joining unions.
1949-1950 - Coal
miners’ general strike. Beginning in West Virginia under leadership
of the Johnson-Forrest Tendency of the SWP and at first authorized by UMWA
president Lewis, it rapidly spread to all of Appalachia and then to the West.
After Lewis prematurely ordered the miners back to work, the strike
became as much against him and his collaboration as against Big Coal.
1950-1953: The Korean
War.
1956: The Bank
Holding Company Act specifies that the Fed’s Board of Governors must approve
the establishment of a bank holding company, and prohibits a holding company in
one state from owning a bank headquartered in another state.
1959-1975: The Viet Nam
War.
1964: The Revenue
Act reduces the tax rate for the top bracket from 91% to 70%.
1968: The Truth in
Lending Act requires banks to disclose loan terms & fees.
1970: The Bank Holding Company Act weakens the Glass-Steagall
Act by allowing commercial banks, via holding companies, to both accept
deposits and make commercial loans.
The Unsolicited Credit Card Act prohibits
unsolicited credit cards.
The Occupational Safety and Health Act
protects workers safety and health on the job.
1971-1978: Stagflation:
massive unemployment and rising prices at the same time.
1971: Pres. Nixon
disconnects the dollar from the gold standard.
1973-1974: The stock
market crashed and stayed down.
1973: The Oil Crisis.
1974: The Fair
Credit Billing Act attempts to protect consumers from unfair billing practices
and provides a mechanism for addressing billing errors.
The Employee Retirement Income Security
Act encourages pension funds to get involved in risky stock speculation, which
gives Mike Milliken the platform he needs to launch his massive fraud schemes
as well as enabling the ruin of retirement of millions in the 2000s.
1976: The
Consumer Leasing Act attempts to assure that meaningful and
accurate disclosure of lease terms is provided to consumers before entering
into a contract.
1978: SCOTUS’s
decision in Marquette National Bank of
Minneapolis v. First of Omaha Service Corporation allows banks to make
loans in states other than where they are headquartered, causing lenders to rush
to places with the weakest consumer protections.
1980-1983: Recession.
1980: The Silver
Thursday stock market crash in March.
The Depository Institutions Deregulation and
Monetary Control Act sponsored by Sen. Jake Garn (R-Utah) removes usury caps
for mortgages; raises the bar for prosecuting lenders; forces all banks to obey
the Federal Reserve; allows banks to merge; removes the power of the Fed’s
board of directors to set savings interest rates; and allows credit unions and
S&L’s to offer cheques and other banking services without regulatory safeguards.
The Truth in Lending
Simplification and Reform Act limits the information credit companies are
required to disclose on their interest rates to their APR and exempts creditors
from liability in several cases.
1981: The Economic
Recovery Tax Act reduces the tax rate on the top bracket from 70% down to 50%.
1982-1998: The Great
Commodities Crunch.
1982-1988: Real estate
boom.
Leveraged buyout (LBO) boom in the same
period.
1982: The Depository
Institutions Act sponsored by Sen. Jake Garn (R-Utah) and Rep. Fernand St.
Germain (D-Rhode Island) deregulates the savings and loan industry and credit
unions.
The Alternative Mortgage Transactions
Parity Act allows adjustable rate mortgages (ARM), balloon-payment mortgages,
interest-only mortgages, and option-ARM.
1986-1991: The Savings
& Loan Crisis.
1986: The Tax Reform
Act reduces the tax rate for the top bracket from 50% to 38.5% in 1987 and to
28% in 1988, yet RAISES the LOWEST tax rate from 11% to 15%.
1987: Drexel Burnham
Lambert Inc. creates “collateralized debt obligations” (CDOs), securities made
up of myriad loans and bonds with different risk levels.
The stock market crashes on 19 October.
1988: The Fair Credit
and Charge Card Disclosure Act mandates that companies provide consumers with
details of their fees.
The Home Equity Loan Consumer Protection
Act requires disclosure by creditors of terms, rates, and conditions,
miscellaneous charges, payment terms, and variable rates.
1989: The FSLIC is
declared insolvent.
The stock market crashes 13 October.
1990-1991: Recession.
1990: The Omnibus
Budget Reconciliation Act raises the top tax rate to 31%.
1991: The Gulf War.
1993: The Omnibus
Budget Reconciliation Act raises the top tax rate to 39.6%.
With support from the Republican Party,
Bill Clinton pushes the North American Free Trade Act (NAFTA) through Congress.
1994: The Home
Ownership and Equity Protection Act attempts to limit abuses in the home equity
lending market.
The Interstate Banking and Branching
Efficiency Act abolishes the Bank Holding Company Act prohibition against a bank
holding company in one state acquiring a bank headquartered in another state.
The Violent Crime Control and Law
Enforcement Act, initiated by the Clinton administration, written by Sen. Joe
Biden (D-DE), and sponsored by Rep. Joe Brooks (R-TX), passed Congress and is
signed into law. The bill includes provisions of mandatory sentences,
increases the opportunities for the death penalty, eliminates higher education
for inmates, increases money for new prisons, and supports the private prison
industry, and allows for states to pass three-strikes laws.
1995-2000: The Dot-Com
Boom.
1995: The Truth in
Lending Class Action Relief Act sponsored by Rep. Bill McCollum (D-Fla.) eases
regulations on creditors and makes it more difficult to sue for securities fraud.
1996: The Economic
Growth and Regulatory Paperwork Reduction Act loosens supervisory regulations
over financial institutions and lessened creditor liability.
The Office of Thrift Supervision issues
a rule preempting all state laws regulating S&L credit activities.
Congress passed the Clinton
administration-sponsored Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act
placed a lifetime limit on welfare benefits, devolved responsibility for
welfare to the states, and instituted a workfare-for-welfare program
requirement, which ends the sixty year old New Deal.
1997: The stock
market crashes on 27 October.
1999: The Financial Services Modernization Act
sponsored by Sen. Phil Gramm (R-Texas) and Rep. Jim Leach (R-Iowa) repeals the
remaining provisions of Glass-Steagall which distinguish between investment
banks and commercial banks, setting off a wave of megamergers among banks and
insurance and securities companies.
2000-2003: Recession
2000: The Commodity
Futures Modernization Act deregulates OTC derivatives trading, gives rise to the
Enron debacle, and opens the door to an explosion in new, unregulated
securities, including the credit default swap.
The American Homeownership and Economic
Opportunity Act makes it harder for consumers to get out of lender-required
insurance.
Commodities prices start rising
steadily.
2001: The 9/11
attacks.
2001-present: The Afghan
War.
2002-2007: Booms in
housing, LBOs, CDOs and debt-repackaging.
2003-2011: The Iraq War.
2003: The Jobs and
Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act reduces the top tax rate to 35%.
2004: The Federal
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency issues final rule to preempt states
from applying most of their credit laws to national banks and their subsidiaries.
The American Jobs Creation Act does
little for workers but provides numerous tax credits for agribusiness and other
commercial institutions.
2005: The Bankruptcy
Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act sponsored by Sen. Charles Grassley
(R-Iowa) makes it far harder for consumers (but not businesses) to discharge
debts through declaration of bankruptcy.
In the case of Susette Kelo, et
al. v. City of New London, Connecticut, et al., the “liberal” majority of
SCOTUS rules that public government may seize personal property under eminent
domain for profit of private corporations under the moniker “economic
development”.
2007-present: The Great
Recession.
2007: Stock markets
worldwide crash in February. In the
U.S.A., the subprime market crashes soon after.
2008: The Mortgage
Disclosure and Improvement Act adds to the requirements for early disclosures
of terms and conditions.
The Congress and Pres. Bush authorize
the $475,000,000,000 Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP).
Meanwhile, Chairman Bernanke and the
Federal Reserve Board of Directors secretly loan American and
foreign banks and financial institutions $7,700,000,000,000 ($7.7 TRILLION) at
no interest, which it then borrows back at interest, under the Term
Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility. The TABSLF supports issuance of
ABS collateralized by student, auto, credit card, and SBA loans.
In September, the stock market drops to
its lowest since 1987.
2009: The Credit
Card Accountability Responsibility and Disclosure Act attempts to limit how
credit card companies can charge consumers, but without price controls, rate
caps, or fee schedules. In other words,
it’s toothless.
The Helping Families Save Their Homes
Act requires that homeowners be notified of the sale or transfer of their
mortgages.
The Congress and Pres. Obama pass the
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) for $787,000,000,000.
COTUS and POTUS bailout the auto
industry for $130,000,000,000.
2010: The stock
market crashes in May.
The Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act introduces changes to regulations governing capital investment,
hedge funds, and private equity funds, increases reporting requirements, and
attempts to ensure fair access to credit.
The legislation does not, however, restore the protections of the
Glass-Steagall Banking Act of 1933.
In Citizens United v. Federal
Election Commission, SCOTUS rules that since corporations are people, money
is speech, and any attempt to limit spending on political campaigns violates
the corporations’ freedom of speech under the First Amendment.
2011: The stock
market crashes several times in August.
2012: Congress passes and
Pres. Obama signs the deliberately misleadingly-named Jumpstart Our Business
Startups (JOBS) Act, the purpose of which is not jobs creation but further
de-regulation of venture capitalism.
The Senate Homeland Security &
Governmental Affairs Committee approves the “Keeping Politics Out of Federal
Contracting Act” (KPOFCA), to allow federal contractors to spend and lobby
without having to disclose their influence peddling, in other words, to firmly
entrench politics in federal contracting.
2016: Over the
objections of most of the Democratic Party, Barack Obama signs the
Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).
2020: Due largely to the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, the stock market crashes more than once and unemployments levels rise to ones not seen since the Great Depression. The U.S. Congress and Pres. Trump respond by providing a $4 trillion bailout package for corporations, including for lobbyists, while granting working Americans a one-time payment of $1200 and adding $600 a month to unemployment benefits.
2 comments:
Thank you for taking the time to produce and post this outline.
Depressing and enfuriating, isn't it?
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