![]() Subscribe to Dollars & Sense magazine. Recent articles related to the financial crisis. Madoff's Accomplices: His Victims (Nocera)Finally, somebody in a mainstream publication says something close to what I have been thinking about the Madoff victims. In a column last Friday entitled Madoff Had Accomplices: His Victims, Joe Nocera argues that the investors whom Madoff cheated were irresponsible. As I will argue below, I think they were showed not just personal irresponsibility, but possibly also ethical and political irresponsibility. But here's Nocera:[J]ust about anybody who actually took the time to kick the tires of Mr. Madoff's operation tended to run in the other direction. James R. Hedges IV, who runs an advisory firm called LJH Global Investments, says that in 1997 he spent two hours asking Mr. Madoff basic questions about his operation. "The explanation of his strategy, the consistency of his returns, the way he withheld information—it was a very clear set of warning signs," said Mr. Hedges. When you look at the list of Madoff victims, it contains a lot of high-profile names—but almost no serious institutional investors or endowments. They insist on knowing the kind of information Mr. Madoff refused to supply. I like Nocero's line of thinking, but I wish he'd gone beyond personal investment advice. There is an argument to be made that Madoff's victims—or some of them, at least—and (it should be added) plenty of other big-money investors, are guilty not only of failing in their duties to themselves to invest their money wisely, but also failing ethically to invest their money in ways that don't harm other people. And if this is true of the Madoff investors, then it's true of a lot of other investors in Wall Street's latest high-flying phase. Take Elie Wiesel, for example. Here are some excerpts from the NY Times article about Wiesel's comments at the Portfolio forum Nocera mentions: Elie Wiesel Levels Scorn at Madoff And this:
Now, the punishment Wiesel describes sounds a lot like torture to me—solidary confinement alone is torture—so I was a little taken aback that Wiesel called for it. But what about a humanitarian and professor of ethics like Wiesel failing to look into the source of his and his foundation's investment profits? In the case of Madoff, the source was theft—Madoff and his accomplices used new investors' money to pay interest to older investors (this is what a Ponzi scheme is). But what if Madoff had just been a "good" (i.e., effective) money-manager (albeit with less consistently, and suspiciously, reliable returns), and had been paying Wiesel and his foundation interest that came from, say, companies that outsourced jobs to sweatshops; leveraged buyouts of companies that were then gutted and resold; companies that pollute; companies engaged in predatory lending; etc. etc.—that is to say, the usual sources of Wall Street megaprofits? Madoff was stealing from people, but many a money-manager who hasn't been branded "the most hated man in New York" (as one of the tabloids, I believe, put it), or called a "monster" on the cover of New York magazine has been complicit in plenty of human misery. Would Wiesel have known? Labels: Bernard Madoff, Elie Wiesel, financial crisis, Joe Nocera, Wall Street
Comments:
Of all the commentary blaming Madoff's victims, this is the most disturbing. What Madoff's fraud has exposed is the much bigger fraud of the financial industry and financial adviser collusion. No one should ever seek financial advise from a so called professional adviser who is really just a commissioned sales person whose real job is to have you sign over your money and incurs no fiduciary obligation. It's time to boycott market scams and scammers. Look out for yourself and make financial "advisers" go get real jobs.
Hi Bruce,
Yes, that's the claim. I realize that it sounds pretty outlandish. But if you think about it, it is no more outlandish than the very common arguments that the right-wing has been making for months now that subprime borrowers who got caught up in the housing bubble--itself a kind of Ponzi scheme--are to blame not only for their own foreclosures (because they allegedly bought "too much house"), but even for the financial crisis as a whole. Here's the argument: Suppose you have a million dollars or so to invest. You hand it over to someone who gives you a 10% return. You ask no questions about how that person is able to provide you with that return. He might be a loan shark, or investing in companies that engage in activities that, though legal, still harm lots of people. Isn't it clear that you are partly responsible for the harm that came to the people who were victims of the loan shark, or the harm that came to the people who were victims of the company's legal but unethical activities? This kind of argument is at the basis of the socially responsible investment movement. While I think it's a hard argument to digest in the case of small investors who are trying to make sure they have some money to retirement money (doesn't the main burden fall on the people who run their pensions?), for big money investors, I think this line of thinking is pretty clear. Even for big investors, it's hard to digest the argument in cases like the Madoff victims, because they truly are victims, and what has happened to them has had bad consequences for them. Nevertheless, if they themselves had some role in the harm that came to them (and, it's important to note, the other Madoff victims--remember that the whole scheme depends on Madoff being able to recruit new investors, and the older investors profited, for a while at least, by getting money from the new investors), then they bear some of the blame. Anyhow, that's the claim and the argument as far as I've been able to make it. I agree, by the way, with the earlier commenter that the argument can be extended to the financial "services" industry as a whole (with the possible exception of socially responsible investment firms).
A follow-up on this: I asserted that Elie Weisel's preferred punishment for Madoff--solitary confinement--counted as torture. Here's a recent New Yorker article that backs up that claim (hat-tip to Lois A.).
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