It’s a serious offense. But let’s get real. How different is bribing China’s “princelings,” as they’re called there, from Wall Street’s ongoing program of hiring departing U.S. Treasury officials, presumably in order to grease the wheels of official Washington? Timothy Geithner, Obama’s first Treasury Secretary, is now president of the private-equity firm Warburg Pincus; Obama’s budget director Peter Orszag is now a top executive at Citigroup.
Or, for that matter,
how different is what JP Morgan did in China from Wall Street’s habit of
hiring the children of powerful American politicians? (I don’t mean to
suggest Chelsea Clinton got her hedge-fund job at Avenue Capital
LLC, where she worked from 2006 to 2009, on the basis of anything other
than her financial talents.)
And how much worse is
JP Morgan’s putative offense in China than the torrent of money JP
Morgan and every other major Wall Street bank is pouring into the
campaign coffers of American politicians — making the Street one of the
major backers of Democrats as well as Republicans?
The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act,
under which JP Morgan could be indicted for the favors it has bestowed
in China, is quite strict. It prohibits American companies from paying
money or offering anything of value to foreign officials for the purpose
of “securing any improper advantage.” Hiring one of their children can
certainly qualify as a gift, even without any direct benefit to the
official.
JP Morgan couldn’t even defend itself by arguing it
didn’t make any particular deal or get any specific advantage as a
result of the hires. Under the Act, the gift doesn’t have to be linked
to any particular benefit to the American firm as long as it’s intended
to generate an advantage its competitors don’t enjoy.
Compared to this, corruption of American officials is a breeze. Consider, for example, Countrywide Financial’s generous “Friends of Angelo” lending program, named after its chief executive, Angelo R. Mozilo,
that gave discounted mortgages to influential members of Congress and
their staffs before the housing bubble burst. No criminal or civil
charges have ever been filed related to these loans.
Even before the Supreme Court’s shameful 2010 “Citizens
United” decision — equating corporations with human beings under the
First Amendment, and thereby shielding much corporate political spending
– Republican appointees to the Court had done everything they could to
blunt anti-bribery laws in the United States. In 1999, in “United States v. Sun-Diamond Growers,”
Justice Scalia, writing for the Court, interpreted an anti-bribery law
so loosely as to allow corporations to give gifts to public officials
unless the gifts are linked to specific policies.
We don’t even require that American corporations disclose to their own shareholders the largesse they bestow on our politicians.
Last year around this time, when the Securities and Exchange Commission
released its 2013 to-do list, it signaled it might formally propose a
rule to require corporations to disclose their political spending. The
idea had attracted more than 600,000 mostly favorable comments from the
public, a record response for the agency.But the idea mysteriously slipped off the 2014 agenda released last week, without explanation. Could it have anything to do with the fact that, soon after becoming SEC chair last April, Mary Jo White was pressed by Republican lawmakers to abandon the idea, which was fiercely opposed by business groups.
The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act is important, and JP Morgan should be nailed for bribing Chinese officials. But, if you’ll pardon me for asking, why isn’t there a Domestic Corrupt Practices Act?
Never before has so much U.S. corporate and Wall-Street money poured into our nation’s capital, as well as into our state capitals. Never before have so many Washington officials taken jobs in corporations, lobbying firms, trade associations, and on the Street immediately after leaving office. Our democracy is drowning in big money.
Corruption is corruption, and bribery is bribery, in whatever country or language it’s transacted in.
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