Mitt Romney, “Hero of Finance”
Romney’s backers say he did the tough work needed to restructure the economy. Actually, he seized opportunities that the tax, securities, and bankruptcy laws should never have given him.
“Creative destruction” is Mitt Romney’s best defense for his career in private equity and the trail of displaced workers some of his ventures left behind. The idea comes from the economist Joseph Schumpeter, who argued that capitalism generates economic growth through “gales of creative destruction” that sweep away obsolete technologies and products. As Romney’s advocates have it, that’s what his firm, Bain Capital, has advanced—painful economic changes that are essential to a rising standard of living.
If Romney made his fortune that way, he deserves the praise that some conservatives have lavished on him for contributing to American competitiveness. But that isn’t the whole story. Much of the work of Bain and other private—equity firms has little to do with the kind of wrenching Schumpeterian change that contributes to growth, still less to the job creation for which Romney claims credit.
Technological innovation was at the heart of Schumpeter’s vision, and no one today objects to the role of venture capital in financing tech start-ups or to the re-engineering of businesses to take advantage of new technology. Reorganizing firms to exploit special provisions in tax, securities, and bankruptcy laws is a different proposition. That kind of restructuring can be immensely profitable, transferring wealth to investors while making no positive contribution to growth and employment.
The standard operating procedure for private equity has been to buy firms, take them private, and load them up with debt. By taking them private, the new owners escape from the securities laws, which apply only to publicly traded companies. By loading them with debt, they cut the companies’ taxes because the interest is fully deductible from profits, and they use those tax savings to pay themselves generous fees and dividends. If an overleveraged enterprise then fails, they take it into bankruptcy, firing workers and stiffing creditors even though their own firm has already pocketed large gains. And because private-equity partners can receive those gains as “carried interest” (taxed only at 15 percent), they benefit from special legal advantages in yet one more way.
This kind of restructuring doesn’t just siphon off wealth; it can also interfere with genuine innovation because debt-burdened companies are sometimes starved for capital to invest in new technologies and products. Private equity has generally sought a high return with a quick exit instead of providing patient capital for long-term gains. That’s great for those who are in on the deal, but not for the national economy.
Private equity has also contributed to a broader change related to rising economic inequality. Instead of corporations serving a complex of interests—owners, workers, and communities—they have increasingly become wholly dedicated to maximizing returns to owners. This “shareholder-value revolution” has helped to drive the overexpansion of the financial sector and to funnel the gains from economic growth into fewer hands—Romney’s, for example.
That Romney served investors well at Bain, no one doubts. That’s not a credential, however, for solving the nation’s problems. We ought to be reducing the incentives for the maneuvers that enriched Romney—for example, by cutting the deductibility of interest on debt incurred in acquiring companies and raising taxes on “carried interest” so that financiers pay no lower a tax rate than the rest of us. Good luck with that in a Romney presidency.
There is a larger point about Romney’s career and good public policy. The turmoil in the private economy, whether generated by creative destruction or financial manipulation, is a reason we need progressive government. Individual firms cannot be counted on to retrain workers for new jobs or to provide them with long-term security; the very instability of private employment is why workers need to be able to count on government when they get displaced to help them obtain the education and skills to adapt. The best “national innovation systems” minimize the harms to workers while advancing technological progress.
Schumpeter’s 1942 classic, Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy, was a dour book. A true believer in capitalism, Schumpeter nonetheless thought it was doomed because people wouldn’t put up with creative destruction, and businessmen lacked the heroic qualities to become effective political leaders. He was wrong on both counts. Instead of resisting innovation, we welcome it, and some business leaders, like Steve Jobs, have become popular heroes.
But Romney is no Jobs, and even his most successful investments—Domino’s Pizza, Staples, and Sports Authority—don’t quite make him a Schumpeterian hero. There is one good thing about his candidacy, though. It highlights the inequities that have helped make people like Romney so wealthy and powerful.
Mitt Romney: Goldman Sachs Guy
Mitt says he’s “not a Wall Street guy.” But in one key way, he’s pure Wall Street.
“I am not a Wall Street guy, classically defined,” said Mitt Romney in a December interview with the Huffington Post. Private equity firm Bain Capital, Romney’s longtime employer and the company that made him rich, he seemed to say, was a different breed from JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, and the other Wall Street financial titans. It was as if he was distancing himself from the unpopular Wall Streeters who helped cause the 2008 economic collapse.
But in one key way, Romney is pure Wall Street. A review of his personal financial disclosure records shows that a chunk of Romney’s wealth—he’s worth an estimated $190 million to $250 million—comes from investments in an array of Wall Street banks and investment houses, none more so than Goldman Sachs.
Romney and his wife, Ann, have investments in nearly three-dozen various Goldman funds together valued at between $17.7 million to $50.5 million, according to a financial disclosure form (PDF) filed in August 2011. Those investments appear in the blind trusts and individual retirement accounts belonging to the Romneys. Romney’s been a loyal Goldman Sachs client. His 2007 disclosure, filed before his first presidential run, showed Goldman investments valued at between $18.2 million and $51.5 million.
No other Republican presidential candidate comes to close to matching the size and breadth of Romney’s investment portfolio. Nor do any of the other candidates’ personal financial disclosures list any investments in Goldman-run funds. Romney’s big bet on Goldman’s financial wizardry could give more ammo to his critics who attack him as a out-of-touch corporate elite who profited by flipping companies and laying off workers, and who has little in common with average Americans. (A Romney spokeswoman did not respond to a request for comment.)
Goldman Sachs is considered by many one of the villains of the 2008 financial crisis. In 2010, Rolling Stone‘s Matt Taibbi acidly described Goldman as “a great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like money.” After a lengthy investigation into the firm’s activities, Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) accused Goldman last year of deceiving its clients by selling them complex investments that the firm’s own traders predicted would fail—a charge Goldman vehemently denied. Levin also accused Goldman brass of misleading Congress about its trading activities, referring the matter to the Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission.
The Goldman investments in Romney’s 2011 disclosure are spread across a variety of portfolios and investment funds. A private, Goldman-managed stock portfolio in Mitt Romney’s blind trust worth between $1,000,001 and $5,000,000 contains stock holdings in 32 companies, including Bank of America, McDonald’s, Staples, and Occidental Petroleum. Another Goldman fund, also worth between $1,000,001 and $5,000,000, invests in (PDF) everything from junk bonds to US Treasuries, derivatives to futures, foreign currencies to the government housing corporation Fannie Mae.
Here’s a list of the Romneys’ most recent Goldman investments:
| Investment | Lowrange | Highrange | Holder | Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GS Financial Square Federal Fund – FST Shares | $5,000,001 | $25,000,000 | Mitt | IRA |
| GS Private Client Portfolio | $1,000,001 | $5,000,000 | Mitt | Blind trust |
| GS Strategic Income Fund Class 1 | $1,000,001 | $5,000,000 | Mitt | Blind trust |
| Goldman Sachs Small Cap Value Class 1 | $500,001 | $1,000,000 | Mitt | Blind trust |
| GS Financial Square Federal Fund – FST Shares | $1,000,000 | $1,000,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| The Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Linked to GP GSCI Agriculture, structured note | $500,001 | $1,000,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| Goldman Sachs Trust GS Inflation Protected Securities Funds – INSTL SHS | $1,000,000 | $1,000,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| The Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Linked to MSCI EAFE Structured Note | $500,001 | $1,000,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| GS Local Emerging Mkts Debt FD Mutual Fund | $500,001 | $1,000,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| GS Strategic Income Fund CL 1 | $500,001 | $1,000,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| The Goldman Sachs Group Inc Linked to DJIA Structured Note | $500,001 | $1,000,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| The Goldman Sachs Group Inc Linked to DJIA Structured Note | $500,001 | $1,000,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| GS 2002 Exchange Place Fund LP | $1,000,000 | $1,000,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| GS Capital Partners Fund 2000 LP | $500,001 | $1,000,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| Goldman Sachs Global Opportunities Fund LLC | $1,000,000 | $1,000,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| Goldman Sachs Hedge Fund Partners LLC | $1,000,000 | $1,000,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| Goldman Sachs Hedge Fund Partners II LLC | $1,000,000 | $1,000,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| Goldman Sachs Trust GS Inflation Protected Securities Fund – INSTL SHS | $250,001 | $500,000 | Mitt | Blind trust |
| The Goldman Sachs Group Inc Linked to Russell 2000 Index Structured Note | $250,001 | $500,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| Cash – GS Account | $100,001 | $250,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| Cash – GS Account | $50,001 | $100,000 | Mitt | Blind trust |
| GS Emerging Markets Opportunities Fund LLC | $50,001 | $100,000 | Mitt | Blind trust |
| GS Capital Partners III LP | $15,001 | $50,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| GS Financial Square Federal Fund – FST Shares | $1,001 | $15,000 | Ann | IRA |
| Goldman Sachs Core Fixed-Inc Mutual Fund | $1,001 | $15,000 | Ann | IRA |
| The Goldman Sachs Group CMN (Sold) | $0 | $1,001 | Mitt | Blind trust |
| Goldman Sachs Investment Grade Credit Fund – Inst (Sold) | $0 | $1,001 | Mitt | Blind trust |
| GS Global Equity Partners I, LLC (Sold) | $0 | $1,001 | Mitt | Blind trust |
| Cash – GS Account | $0 | $1,001 | Mitt | IRA |
| Goldman Sachs Ultra-Short Duration Government FD (Sold) | $0 | $1,001 | Mitt | IRA |
| Goldman Sachs Short Duration Government FD (Sold) | $0 | $1,001 | Mitt | IRA |
Here’s a list of Goldman investments in Romney’s 2007 disclosure:
| Investment | Lowrange | Highrange | Holder | Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Goldman Sachs Financial Square (Sold) | $0 | $1,001 | Mitt | Blind trust |
| Goldman Sachs Institutional LI (Sold) | $0 | $1,001 | Mitt | Blind trust |
| Goldman Sachs Bank Deposit | $500,000 | $1,000,000 | Mitt | Blind trust |
| Goldman Sachs Emerging Equity Fund | $1,000,001 | $5,000,000 | Mitt | Blind trust |
| Goldman Sachs Group, Inc | $1,000,001 | $5,000,000 | Mitt | Blind trust |
| Goldman Sachs Struct Intl Equity Fund | $1,000,001 | $5,000,000 | Mitt | Blind trust |
| GS Global Equity Partners | $1,000,001 | $5,000,000 | Mitt | Blind trust |
| The Goldman Sachs Group Inc 0% 9/25/08 (Sold) | $0 | $1,001 | Mitt | Blind trust |
| The Goldman Sachs Group Inc 0% Due 12/11/2009 (Sold) | $0 | $1,001 | Mitt | Blind trust |
| The Goldman Sachs Group Inc 0% Due 3/25/10 | $250,001 | $500,000 | Mitt | Blind trust |
| GS Emerging Markets Opportunities Fund, LLC | $1,000,001 | $5,000,000 | Mitt | Blind trust |
| Goldman Sachs Global Strategic Energy Fund, LLC | $1,000,001 | $5,000,000 | Mitt | Blind trust |
| Goldman Sachs GTAA Fund, LCC | $1,000,001 | $5,000,000 | Mitt | Blind trust |
| Goldman Sachs Financial Square Federal Fund | $1,000,000 | $1,000,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| Goldman Sachs Intl Real Estate Secs Fund | $1,000,000 | $1,000,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| GS 2002 Exchange Place Fund LP | $1,000,000 | $1,000,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| GS Global Opportunities, LLC | $1,000,000 | $1,000,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| GS Direct Strategies Fund LLC | $1,000,000 | $1,000,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| GS Hedge Fund Partners II LLC | $1,000,000 | $1,000,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| GS Hedge Fund Partners LLC | $1,000,000 | $1,000,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| GS Quant and Active Direct Strategies Fund, LLC | $1,000,000 | $1,000,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| GS Capital Partners Fund 2000, LP | $1,000,000 | $1,000,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| GS Capital Partners III LP | $100,101 | $250,000 | Ann | Blind trust |
| Goldman Sachs Financial Square Federal Fund | $1,000,001 | $5,000,000 | Mitt | IRA |
| Goldman Sachs Emerging Markets Equity Fund | $250,001 | $500,000 | Mitt | IRA |
| GS Structured US Equity Institutional | $100,101 | $250,000 | Mitt | IRA |
| Goldman Sachs Japanese Equity Fund | $0 | $1,001 | Mitt | IRA |
| Goldman Sachs Financial Square Federal Fund | $0 | $1,001 | Ann | IRA |
| Goldman Sachs Core Fixed-Inc I Mutual Fund | $1,001 | $15,000 | Ann | IRA |
Romney has grappled with accusations in both of his presidential bids that he’s a lifelong member of the wealthy elite who can’t relate to blue-collar Americans. Romney has recently compounded his 1-percent problem by claiming that $374,000 in speaking fees is “not very much,” betting Rick Perry $10,000 during a nationally televised debate, and revealing that he pays roughly 15 percent in taxes. (A typical middle class family pays closer to 25 percent.)
Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics, says that while Romney isn’t the first very wealthy man to run for president (think John F. Kennedy and Franklin Delano Roosevelt), one of Romney’s basic problems is connecting with middle-class Americans. His many investments in Goldman could shape voters’ opinions of Romney. “The massive Goldman holdings would be another bit of the Romney mosaic,” Sabato says. “It’s another reason why Romney has to find ways to better connect with average people’s problems—because he doesn’t have any of the same problems on his plate.”
By: Andy Kroll, Mother Jones, January 23, 2012
Mitt Romney’s New Problem: A Rising Sun
Mitt Romney was on the campaign trail in South Carolina yesterday, and brought up the issue he expects to ride into the White House: the U.S. economy. Unfortunately for the former governor, the message isn’t quite the same as it was a few months ago.
In his remarks [Friday], Romney also acknowledged the economy was getting better — something he has said before….
“And [President Obama]’s going to say the economy is getting better,” Romney said. “Thank heavens it’s getting better. It’s getting better not because of him, it’s in spite of him and what he’s done.”
For those keeping track, Romney said twice in three sentences that he believes the economy is “getting better.”
I’ve noticed over the last week, this keeps coming up. Shortly before the New Hampshire primary, Romney said he’s “glad” the economy is improving, but quickly added that President Obama “doesn’t deserve” credit. In an interview with Bloomberg Television, Romney also said the economy is recovering, but said “this president has not helped it.”
And in a debate for the Republican presidential candidates last weekend, Romney made his case this way:
“The president is going to try to take responsibility for things getting better. It’s like the rooster trying to take responsibility for the sun rising. He didn’t do it.”
I believe campaign professionals call this a “losing argument.”
Look, I don’t know whether the recovery will strengthen in 2012. The recent evidence has been mixed; experts’ projections vary widely; and the global threats to the economy remain real and hard to predict. There is, however, room for some optimism and Romney himself believes, in his words, economic conditions are “getting better.”
But as a campaign matter, if Romney is right about a strengthening recovery, he has to realize he’s going to lose. For the entirety of 2011, the former governor had a single message he repeated ad nauseum: Obama made a bad economy worse. It wasn’t true, but so long as the recovery was largely invisible, it was a message that could fool a lot of the people a lot of the time.
Two weeks into 2012, Romney has a new message: don’t give Obama credit for making the economy better. In effect, the Republican is arguing, “Sure, Obama inherited a deep recession. And sure, he took a bunch of steps to turn the economy around. And sure, we’re now seeing more jobs being created and more economic growth. But vote against him anyway.”
This isn’t just a tough sell; it’s an impossible one.
Look again at what Romney said in last weekend’s debate: “The president is going to try to take responsibility for things getting better. It’s like the rooster trying to take responsibility for the sun rising.”
By Romney’s own reasoning, the sun is rising and it’s morning in America. As Jon Chait put it, “This seems like a shockingly weak line — if you concede that it’s morning, you’ve lost the argument.”
By: Steve Benen, Contributing Writer, Washington Monthly, Political Animal, January 14, 012
America Is Not A Corporation
“And greed — you mark my words — will not only save Teldar Paper, but that other malfunctioning corporation called the U.S.A.”
That’s how the fictional Gordon Gekko finished his famous “Greed is good” speech in the 1987 film “Wall Street.” In the movie, Gekko got his comeuppance. But in real life, Gekkoism triumphed, and policy based on the notion that greed is good is a major reason why income has grown so much more rapidly for the richest 1 percent than for the middle class.
Today, however, let’s focus on the rest of that sentence, which compares America to a corporation. This, too, is an idea that has been widely accepted. And it’s the main plank of Mitt Romney’s case that he should be president: In effect, he is asserting that what we need to fix our ailing economy is someone who has been successful in business.
In so doing, he has, of course, invited close scrutiny of his business career. And it turns out that there is at least a whiff of Gordon Gekko in his time at Bain Capital, a private equity firm; he was a buyer and seller of businesses, often to the detriment of their employees, rather than someone who ran companies for the long haul. (Also, when will he release his tax returns?) Nor has he helped his credibility by making untenable claims about his role as a “job creator.”
But there’s a deeper problem in the whole notion that what this nation needs is a successful businessman as president: America is not, in fact, a corporation. Making good economic policy isn’t at all like maximizing corporate profits. And businessmen — even great businessmen — do not, in general, have any special insights into what it takes to achieve economic recovery.
Why isn’t a national economy like a corporation? For one thing, there’s no simple bottom line. For another, the economy is vastly more complex than even the largest private company.
Most relevant for our current situation, however, is the point that even giant corporations sell the great bulk of what they produce to other people, not to their own employees — whereas even small countries sell most of what they produce to themselves, and big countries like America are overwhelmingly their own main customers.
Yes, there’s a global economy. But six out of seven American workers are employed in service industries, which are largely insulated from international competition, and even our manufacturers sell much of their production to the domestic market.
And the fact that we mostly sell to ourselves makes an enormous difference when you think about policy.
Consider what happens when a business engages in ruthless cost-cutting. From the point of view of the firm’s owners (though not its workers), the more costs that are cut, the better. Any dollars taken off the cost side of the balance sheet are added to the bottom line.
But the story is very different when a government slashes spending in the face of a depressed economy. Look at Greece, Spain, and Ireland, all of which have adopted harsh austerity policies. In each case, unemployment soared, because cuts in government spending mainly hit domestic producers. And, in each case, the reduction in budget deficits was much less than expected, because tax receipts fell as output and employment collapsed.
Now, to be fair, being a career politician isn’t necessarily a better preparation for managing economic policy than being a businessman. But Mr. Romney is the one claiming that his career makes him especially suited for the presidency. Did I mention that the last businessman to live in the White House was a guy named Herbert Hoover? (Unless you count former President George W. Bush.)
And there’s also the question of whether Mr. Romney understands the difference between running a business and managing an economy.
Like many observers, I was somewhat startled by his latest defense of his record at Bain — namely, that he did the same thing the Obama administration did when it bailed out the auto industry, laying off workers in the process. One might think that Mr. Romney would rather not talk about a highly successful policy that just about everyone in the Republican Party, including him, denounced at the time.
But what really struck me was how Mr. Romney characterized President Obama’s actions: “He did it to try to save the business.” No, he didn’t; he did it to save the industry, and thereby to save jobs that would otherwise have been lost, deepening America’s slump. Does Mr. Romney understand the distinction?
America certainly needs better economic policies than it has right now — and while most of the blame for poor policies belongs to Republicans and their scorched-earth opposition to anything constructive, the president has made some important mistakes. But we’re not going to get better policies if the man sitting in the Oval Office next year sees his job as being that of engineering a leveraged buyout of America Inc.
By: Paul Krugman, Op-Ed Columnist, The New York Times, January 12, 2012
Would Mitt Romney’s “Competence” Really Fix Washington?
The Washington Post’s Michael Gerson offers measured praise to former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney’s campaign and its all-but-inevitable march to the 2012 presidential nomination.
Gerson concludes this way:
Like Dwight Eisenhower, Romney is a man of vague ideology and deep values. In political matters, he is empirical and pragmatic. He studies problems, assesses risks, calculates likely outcomes. Those expecting Romney to be a philosophic leader will be disappointed. He is a management consultant, and a good one.
Has the moment of the management consultant arrived in American politics? In our desperate drought of public competence, Romney has a strong case to make.
I’m not sure how Romney Competence is supposed to work in practice.
For starters, the basic instinct of conservative economic policy is that government should stay out of the way and let the Bain Capitals of the world work their creative-destructive magic. It seems to me you don’t need to have run Bain Capital in order to, as president, stay out of its way.
Maybe that’s too snarky.
Okay, then. Let’s agree that it’s not former Gov. Romney’s specific expertise as a business consultant that’s needed in Washington. What we need in a president, more generally, is someone with deeply-rooted experience as a manager or executive.
Fine.
If we’re talking about the day-to-day demands of running the government—a big, formidable, complex job—I agree.
But let’s picture President Romney, with his deep management experience, his love of data, his (as Gerson puts it) belief that the “real task of governing” is “making systems work.” Let’s picture management-systems-loving President Romney negotiating with Congress. I want to know how, exactly, does Romney Competence deal with a “system” that’s riven by ideology? How does he make that one “work”?
When it comes to budgeting and fiscal reform, there’s no lack of number-crunches and data-lovers in Washington.
Occasionally, some of them even formulate actual proposals for lawmakers’ consideration.
Why, the current president of the United States established a commission to come up with a plan to achieve long-term fiscal sustainability!
What came of it?
Nothing.
Was it a lack of competence that explains why President Obama let the Bowles-Simpson plan twist in the wind? And why the debt-ceiling and “supercommittee” negotiations tanked so ignominiously?
When Tea Partyers refuse any increases in government revenue—even if they’re generated via code simplification rather than individual rate hikes, and even when they’re accompanied by entitlement reform—are they incompetent?
Is it so-called competence that divides Republican Sen. Tom Coburn from Americans for Tax Reform activist Grover Norquist?
Or is it something else? (Hint: it begins with an “i” and ends with a “y”.)
I genuinely want to know what difference it would make to have Mitt Romney, rather than one of his rivals, in the room with Coburn and Norquist.
Is it competence that’s urgently needed—or courage?
Which occasions the question I’ve been asking all along: When has Mitt Romney ever displayed political courage?
By: Scott Galupo, U. S. News and World Report, January 10, 2012