Thoughts, reflections, news, and musings from a veteran Silicon Valley journalist and commentator.

February 26, 2009

Bring Back Usury Laws To Hasten Economic Recovery

My previous posts on the credit crisis have been getting so many hits I'll weigh in on that topic again with a brief observation and a very simple proposal. First, the observation:

Most of the talking heads attribute the current credit crisis to the housing bubble, the sub-prime loan mess and the securitization of debt of dubious value. But those are effects, not causes. I keep waiting for someone to point out that all three are symptoms of something else: the 1980 repeal of the federal law that restrained usury. The repeal of federal protections against usury created the economically poisonous illusion that investors can readily and reliably obtain high double-digit annual returns, legally, simply by purchasing commoditized debt obligations. Over the next 20 years, the financial services industry chased that illusion like a junkie after a fix, coming up with financial instruments that grew increasingly deranged. But what started it all was the repeal of the usury laws. That lit the fuse. I'm astonished that I am yet to hear a single T.V commentator connect those dots, which are practically sitting on top of one another.

A related observation: legal or illegal, usury does not work, at least not as a practical economic theory. It just doesn't work. Not over time. It's like making a horse carry 1000 pounds. The horse dies. And dead horses don't pay their bills. There we are.

So what happened is that usury was made legal, and then it got securitized.

My modest proposal:

Make usury illegal again.

Reinstate federal protections against usury or develop new protections that set practical and fair limits on the amount of interest banks and other lenders can charge on items like mortgages and credit cards. If investors know the most they can legally make on debt obligations is in the single-digit neighborhood, there would be no incentive to create toxic pools of debt like those that have clogged up our financial system.

What's happening now, though, is the Obama administration is pouring more money into banks that still seek to practice usury. There is, however, no amount of federal money that is ever going to make usury a winning formula. So all that federal money will continue to go right down the drain. President Obama, Democrats in Congress: please bring back usury laws. Bringing back the usury laws is a critical part of the regulatory medicine required to restore stability and sanity to our banking and financial services sector.

Comments

Dear Hal,

I typed "abolish usury" in a search engine and found that ONE political organization exists in South Africa toward its purpose. However, I couldn't find any others.

I agree entirely. Usury should be illegal. At the very least, restricted.

Moreover, I would argue that usury has destroyed the spirit of humanity. Of true capitalism. The creation of money for money's sake is the most unethical, immoral practice. It has become the nature of being among those in position to manipulate it most effectively and has paralyzed the common good.

If the Nine ruled the abolishment of usury a Constitutional Law, America would see an end to the Federal Reserve, a return of competency to our legislation, and there would stir a spirit of positive energy and liberty in America unrivaled in this steadily globalizing community.

Posted by: daniel ingraham at July 27, 2009 02:15 PM

Hal Plotkin, you are a GENIUS and absolutely succient about the root of the main financial problems today. I have a case in point that clearly illustarates the issue, if you are interested I will be happy to fax you a copy.
I am sending your article to some of our elected representatives here in California and asking for their opinions. their votes, and their corporation in bringing back Usury Laws.
Yours truly,
Patricia K.-D. (310-827-3018)

Posted by: Patricia at August 1, 2009 04:18 PM

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