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Quick: what do the following world-famous men have
in common: John Kenneth
Galbraith, Donald J. Trump, and David Rockefeller? What values could
possibly be shared by
the socialist economist who got rich by writing best- selling volumes
denouncing affluence; the
billionaire wheeler-dealer; and the fabulous head of the financially
and politically powerful
Rockefeller World Empire?
Would you believe: hatred of making money and of
"capitalist greed?" Yes, at least when
it comes to making money by one particular man, the Wall Street bond
specialist Michael R.
Milken.
In an article in which the August New York Times
was moved to drop its
cherished veil of objectivity and shout in its headline, "Wages Even
Wall St. Can't Stomach"
(April 3, 1989), these three gentlemen each weighed in against the $550
million earned by Mr.
Milken in 1987. Gailbraith, of course, was Galbraith, denouncing the
"process of financial
aberration" under modern American capitalism.
More interesting were billionaires Trump and
Rockefeller. Speaking from his own lofty
financial perch, Donald Trump unctuously declared of Milken's salary,
"you can be happy on a
lot less money," going on to express his "amazement" that his former
employers, the Wall Street
firm of Drexel Burnham Lambert "would allow someone to benefit that
greatly." Well, it should
be easy enough to clear up Mr. Trump's alleged befuddlement. We would
use economic jargon
and say that the payment was justified by Mr. Milken's "marginal value
product" to the firm, or
simply say that Milken was clearly worth it, otherwise Drexel Burnham
would not have happily
continued the arrangement from 1975 until this year.
In fact, Mr. Milken was worth it because he has
been an extraordinarily creative financial
innovator. During the 1960s, the existing corporate power elite, often
running their corporations
inefficiently--an elite virtually headed by David Rockefeller--saw
their positions threatened by
takeover bids, in which outside financial interests bid for stockholder
support against their own
inept managerial elites.
The exiting corporate elites turned--as usual--for
aid and bailout to the federal
government, which obligingly passed the Williams Act (named for the New
Jersey Senator who
was later sent to jail in the Abscam affair) in 1967. Before the
Williams Act, takeover bids could
occur quickly and silently, with little hassle. The 1967 Act, however,
gravely crippled takeover
bids by decreeing that if a financial group amassed more than 5 % of
the stock of a corporation, it
would have to stop, publicly announce its intent to arrange a takeover
bid, and then wait for a
certain time period before it could proceed on its plans. What Milken
did was to resurrect and
make flourish the takeover bid concept through the issue of high-yield
bonds (the "leveraged
buy-out").
The new takeover process enraged the
Rockefeller-type corporate elite, and enriched both
Mr. Milken and his employers, who had the sound business sense to hire
Milken on commission,
and to keep the commission going despite the wrath of the
establishment. In the process Drexel
Burnham grew from a small, third-tier investment firm to one of the
giants of Wall Street.
The establishment was bitter for many reasons. The
big banks who were tied in with the
existing, inefficient corporate elites, found that the upstart takeover
groups could make an end
run around the banks by floating high-yield bonds on the open market.
The competition also
proved inconvenient for firms who issue and trade in blue-chip, but
low-yield, bonds; these firms
soon persuaded their allies in the establishment media to sneeringly
refer to their high-yield
competition as "junk" bonds.
People like Michael Milken perform a vitally
important economic function for the
economy and for consumers, in addition to profiting themselves. One
would think that
economists and writers allegedly in favor of the free market would
readily grasp this fact. In this
case, such entrepreneurs aid the process of shifting the ownership and
control of capital from
inefficient to more efficient and productive hands--a process which is
great for everyone, except,
of course, for the inefficient Old Guard elites whose proclaimed
devotion to the free markets
does not stop them from using the coercion of the federal government to
try to resist or crush
their efficient competitors.
We should also examine the evident hypocrisy of
left-liberals like Galbraith, who, ever
since the 1932 book by Adolf Berle and Gardiner Means, The
Modern Corporation and Private
Property, have been weeping crocodile tears over the plight
of the poor stockholders, who have
been deprived of control of their corporation by a powerful managerial
elite, responsible neither
to consumers nor stockholders. These liberals have long maintained that
if only this stockholder-controlled capitalism could be restored, they
would no longer favor socialism or stringent
government control of business and the economy.
The Berle-Means thesis was always absurdly
overwrought, but to the extent it was
correct, one would think that left-liberals
would have welcomed takeover bids,
leveraged buyouts, and Michael Milken with cheers and huzzahs. For
here, at last, was an easy
way for stockholders to take the control of their corporations into
their own hands, and kick out
inefficient or corrupt management that reduced their profits. Did
liberals in fact welcome the new
financial system ushered in by Milken and others? As we all know, quite
the contrary; they
furiously denounced these upstarts as exemplars of terrible "capitalist
greed."
David Rockefeller's quotation about Milken is
remarkably revealing: "Such an
extraordinary income inevitably raises questions as to whether there
isn't something unbalanced
in the way our financial system is working." How does Rockefeller have
the brass to denounce
high incomes? Ludwig von Mises solved the question years ago by
pointing out that men of great
inherited wealth, men who get their income from capital or capital
gains, have favored the
progressive income tax, because they don't want new competitors rising
up who make their
money on personal wage or salary incomes. People like Rockefeller or
Trump are not appalled,
quite obviously, at high incomes per se; what
appalls them is making money the old-fashioned
way, i.e., by high personal wages or salaries. In other words, through
labor income.
And yes, Mr. Rockefeller, this whole Milken affair,
in fact, the entire reign of terror that
the Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission
have been conducting
for the last several years in Wall Street, raises a lot of questions
about the workings of our
political as well as our financial system. It raises grave questions
about the imbalance of political
power enjoyed by our existing financial and corporate elites, power
that can persuade the
coercive arm of the federal government to repress, cripple, and even
jail people whose only
"crime" is to make money by facilitating the transfer of capital from
less to more efficient hands.
When creative and productive businessmen are harassed and jailed while
rapists, muggers, and
murderers go free, there is something very wrong indeed.
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