in last Sunday's Op-Ed at 40 retrospective, the New York Times published Wall Street’s Fatal Blind Spot, by Michael Lewis and David Einhorn, originally published January 4, 2009.
A few excerpts seem relevant to the plan to raise Atlantic Yards funding from foreign investors via the EB-5 visa plan, specifically job-creation figures that are obscured and extremely questionable, and a lack of checks and balances:
The essay concludes:
Stay tuned for more news tomorrow.
A few excerpts seem relevant to the plan to raise Atlantic Yards funding from foreign investors via the EB-5 visa plan, specifically job-creation figures that are obscured and extremely questionable, and a lack of checks and balances:
Incredibly, intelligent people the world over remain willing to lend us money and even listen to our advice; they appear not to have realized the full extent of our madness. We have at least a brief chance to cure ourselves. But first we need to ask: of what?No one else checked
To that end consider the strange story of Harry Markopolos. Mr. Markopolos is the former investment officer with Rampart Investment Management in Boston who, for nine years, tried to explain to the Securities and Exchange Commission that Bernard L. Madoff couldn’t be anything other than a fraud. Mr. Madoff’s investment performance, given his stated strategy, was not merely improbable but mathematically impossible. And so, Mr. Markopolos reasoned, Bernard Madoff must be doing something other than what he said he was doing.
The essay concludes:
What’s interesting about the Madoff scandal, in retrospect, is how little interest anyone inside the financial system had in exposing it. It wasn’t just Harry Markopolos who smelled a rat. As Mr. Markopolos explained in his letter, Goldman Sachs was refusing to do business with Mr. Madoff; many others doubted Mr. Madoff’s profits or assumed he was front-running his customers and steered clear of him.The parallels are indirect, of course, but the structure of the EB-5 visa program apparently allows for promoters to make exaggerated claims, with no oversight.
Between the lines, Mr. Markopolos hinted that even some of Mr. Madoff’s investors may have suspected that they were the beneficiaries of a scam. After all, it wasn’t all that hard to see that the profits were too good to be true. Some of Mr. Madoff’s investors may have reasoned that the worst that could happen to them, if the authorities put a stop to the front-running, was that a good thing would come to an end.
The Madoff scandal echoes a deeper absence inside our financial system, which has been undermined not merely by bad behavior but by the lack of checks and balances to discourage it. “Greed” doesn’t cut it as a satisfying explanation for the current financial crisis. Greed was necessary but insufficient; in any case, we are as likely to eliminate greed from our national character as we are lust and envy. The fixable problem isn’t the greed of the few but the misaligned interests of the many.
Stay tuned for more news tomorrow.
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