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Obama or McCain: more of the same?

by Dennis Howlett on November 3, 2008

Dipping ones toes into political waters is never terribly wise, especially when it isn’t your chosen subject but the US presidential election is of importance to us professional types.

While I understand the need for change in the US I wonder just how much change will occur in the way business is regulated. Most of my US colleagues abhor the idea of regulation but anyone who looks objectively at the debacle in the financial markets must surely realize that change is a necessity. None of my colleagues believe that government is the place to start that process but where else? Unfettered free markets have run amok – few would deny that – yet I see little by way of cogent solution suggestions.

Many believe Barack Obama’s victory is a done deal. We’ll see. AccountancyAge thinks that:

The answer is that Obama, if he wins, has the potential to send the development of core issues ­ international standards, audit liability caps and fair value ­ in a direction that could not have been imagined just a few months ago…A more inward looking president may not think highly of auditors or convergence to global accounting standards. It’s possible a new president may be more protectionist, much less of an internationalist.

Potential – now where have I heard that before? Immediately prior to Tony Blair’s election back in 1997. I’ve said so privately for months but Obama has the same look, feel and smell as Blair in that time gone by. Lots of rhetoric, not a lot of financial substance when the country was aching for change.

Looking back 11 years, we now know what the UK got. A government that consistently brown-nosed the financial institutions, steadily giving in more and more to an industry that went out of control, aided and abetted by a cynical profession, led by the Big Four.

Unlike the US, UK observers have the benefit of hindsight. US folk will say ‘Ah, but the US is different.’ How so? If anything, lobbyists are more powerful there than anywhere else on earth except perhaps in the puppet ‘democracies’ of the Middle East. If Obama is elected, his first order of business will need be to sluice Washington clean of the blood suckers who corrupt politicians into believing that unfettered capitalism works. Even if he wins with a substantial majority of the US electorate behind him, it won’t be an easy sell on Capitol Hill.

There are already signs that ‘fair value’ could be jettisoned. If it is then what replaces it? Some other artificial way of valuing assets that is just as easy to manipulate? When will business (and banks in particular) get real and recognize illiquid assets have little or no value? What’s so hard to understand about artificially created asset derivatives that they are anything other than casino bets?

In the alternative, if McCain scrapes in, one has to wonder how long it will be before Sarah Palin takes centre stage. Dealing with corruption in Alaska is one thing but on the grand scale that is the United States?

Right now, the hopes of many of my colleagues rest on an Obama victory. The changes they want to see stretch well beyond my small area of concern. I hope that if elected he has the resilience, foresight and plain brass balls the size of Iceland to do what the US – and the rest of us – needs.

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  • @Richard - I need not repeat what I said at the top of the post but will add. As we all know, there is a gulf between what one says one will do when not in power and what happens when the reins of power are handed over.

    Who is to say that Obama will be anything different than Blair, Brown or any of the other politicians that have consistently given in to the interests of the finance sector? Change is a wonderful expressions and I really hope you are correct.

    Given the history of the past 11 years and more important the concentration of wealth and power we have seen in the last few months as a result of the financial crisis, do you honestly believe that the hands that are behind all this will give up so easily?

    Men of good intent have tried before and failed. No-one has yet managed to break the power of the financial institutions, regardless of means.
  • Dennis

    It will be hard for Obama not to deliver on some things

    Throughout the campaign he has focussed on tax havens. He has his name on the Stop Tax Haven Abuse Act. These places are key to the bank's business model, and that of the Big 4 come to that. If he delivers (and the public mood is right) then he will change finance, forever

    I hope, and pray

    But then, you may have noticed I don't duck politics!

    Richard Murphy
  • I've been seeing more and more of the Obama/Blair comparisons. I've also warned folks that in 2000, George W. Bush was seen as a bipartisan reformer who would bring compassionate to conservatism.

    I guess there's only one way to find out! Here's to hoping that Obama rises to the challenge.
  • @Chris, If what Obama told the Marc Anderseen's group holds true, he will rise up to the challenge. I do agree that election campaign and running the country are two different things but if Obama's focus on running the campaign is any indication and if he shows the same kinda focus on solving people's problems, I think Obama will end up being one of the best presidents we ever had.
  • We said the same of Tony Blair and he screwed the country royally in more ways than one, to the point of appointing his own successor - soon to be tossed out of power methinks.
  • Quite possible. My other worry is the filibusterproof majority for democrats. It is the surefire way to hand the power back to republicans in 2010.
  • @Krich - I did say it was dangerous territory and I can only go on what I see from 5K miles distance. Perhaps I should have said: "allegedly"...but your point is well taken.
  • Do you seriously think Sarah Palin cleaned up corruption in Alaska. All she did is to replace the corruption by grey haired Alaskan legislators with one of her own. She needs to come clean on misusing govt. money for flying her family, firing people for personal vendetta, etc.. She needs to come clean on how she built her house.
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