RI profits from Greek tragedy


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Jack Reed and Gary Cohn

In 2009 a change in government forced Greece to admit the truth about its troubled economy: Greece had joined the European Union under false pretenses. It’s economic condition was artificially made to look better than it was due to help from the American investment house Goldman Sachs. Goldman Sachs had helped Greece to hide hundreds of millions of dollars in debt, and in the process netted itself a “premium fee” of $300 million. “The deal also made up 12 percent of Goldman’s $6.35 billion in trading and investment revenue for 2001,” writes Garry Levine for Al Jazeera.

In 2005 Goldman Sachs intervened in a Greek economic crisis a second time, restructuring the original bad deal by increasing debt, stretching out payments, and increasing Goldman’s cut to “something like $500 million.”

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Gina Raimondo

Now in 2009 the new government in Greece was facing yet another crisis, and a team from Goldman Sachs, lead by Gary Cohn, now Chief Operation Officer for Goldman Sachs, flew in to offer yet another restructuring.

“Cohn offered to finance the country’s health care system debt, pushing it far into the future,” writes Levine, “After all, argued Goldman’s team, it had worked before.”

Levine goes on to write, “The Wall Street house not only earned large transaction fees and rights to future Greek revenue, it also hedged its investments, essentially placing a bet on the economy of Greece to fail. Looking at the deals in the rearview mirror, analysts said Goldman’s exposure on Greece was, for all intents and purposes, zero.”

Greece turned down Cohn’s offer, and was forced to accept decades of grueling austerity to work its way out from under mountains of debt. A Greek generation or two will be lost, even as political fascism predictably rises in response to economic privation. Preventable political disaster looms, because Goldman Sachs wanted more money.

Now, in an East Side bike shop with Governor Gina Raimondo, Senator Jack Reed, Mayors Elorza, Diossa, Grebien, Badelli-Hunt and more press than I’ve seen gathered in weeks, Gary Cohn was offering the state $10 million in small business training and funding, and everyone seemed to think this was a great idea.

I couldn’t have been the only person who thought there was irony in Cohn’s statement that, “We at Goldman Sachs… like to be accountable for what we do.”

Goldman Sachs is giving away free money, perhaps to salve their consciences or to buy some positive press after nearly destroying the world economy, or perhaps to inspire a new generation of rich suckers to fleece in the next market bubble. It doesn’t really matter why they are doing it.

When Rhode Island takes the money, they should know that the money comes, in part, at the expense of the Greek people, who suffer because a vampire-like Wall St. bank has consigned the country to half a century of brutal, soul-destroying austerity.

As Levine says so eloquently in his Al Jazeera piece, “The consequences are born by ordinary Greek people that now find themselves in the the economic equivalent of debtors’ prison.”

We should understand the moral consequences of accepting money stained with the blood, sweat and tears of a nation’s future.

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Matt Bodziony, President of NBX Bikes
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Reed and Cohn

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Elorza, Reed and Cohn

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Woonsocket Legislators Call for Fiscal Receiver


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Reps Lisa Baldelli-Hunt and Jon Brien talk to Woonsocket's finance director Tuesday after a vote on a supplemtenal tax increase for the struggling city.

Woonsocket legislators would prefer a receiver step in and help right the struggling city’s financial problems rather than raise property taxes, according to a letter from them to Mayor Leo Fontaine.

“Significant and immediate structural reforms are needed to avert a financial crisis in our city and we respectfully request that as a first priority, our city’s leadership should request that a receiver be appointed,” said a letter signed by Sen Marc Cote and Reps Lisa Baldelli-Hunt, Jon Brien and Bob Phillips. The letter was also sent to Gov. Chafee, Treasurer Raimondo and legislative leadership.

While Reps. Baldelli-Hunt, Brien and Phillips supported the supplemental tax increase for their community yesterday before the House Finance Committee voted o the matter, they said it would be wiser to have a state-appointed receiver negotiate bills and contracts than tax residents more.

Baldelli-Hunt said she has discussed as much with state Director of Revenue Rosemary Booth Gallogly, who has been working closely with struggling cities in the state.

“A receiver has the leverage to make the adjustments that need to be made,” Baldelli-Hunt said yesterday after addressing the House Finance Committee about the supplemental tax increase. “I don’t want a supplemental tax bill to stand in the way of getting a solid plan in place.”

Baldelli-Hunt said she does not want Woonsocket to go into bankruptcy and feels that a receiver can help the cash-strapped city avoid that by renegotiating contracts with unions and implementing other cost-saving measures. She added that a receiver is a better option than a budget commission because it is easier for one person to make bold decisions than a five-member board.

Brien agreed, saying, “I think a receiver is ultimately what we need to do.” He also plans to submit legislation as early as today that would allow Woonsocket to borrow money from its pension fund to bridge its budget deficit. He said that would be a better option than adding an additional tax burden on residents.

Mayor Leo Fontaine also said the city should consider utilizing a receiver, but not before it implements to supplemental tax increase. “We can always go back to a budget commission or a receiver but we can’t go back to [a supplemental tax increase],” he said.

The House Finance Committee approved the supplemental tax increase yesterday after not acting on the matter for a week. Some legislators said the committee was waiting to vote until it had the endorsement of the Woonsocket delegation, which didn’t happen formally until yesterday. “We’ve been hearing different stories over the course of the week, “said Rep. Larry Ehrhardt, a conservative Republican from North Kingstown. “Sometimes they were for it and sometimes they were against it.”

Some said Baldelli-Hunt was using the issue to bolster her credentials against Fontaine in case she runs for mayor of Woonsocket, but she denied the allegation saying, “This has nothing to do with politics.”

Fontaine confirmed he had heard such rumors as well. “I hear the scuttlebut,” he said. “but I’d like to think that we’re all acting in the best interest of the people.”