Issues 2024: Wall Street | American Compass (original) (raw)

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The Issue

Financial markets have ceased to play their vital role channeling capital to productive uses. Instead, they more often take capital back out of businesses. While nearly all public companies used to be “sustainers” that both invested in their future and returned capital to shareholders, now nearly half are “eroders,” disgorging so much cash that they fail to maintain their own capital base.

What Voters Say

Why It Matters

Financial markets play a vital role in a well-functioning economy, channeling investment toward its most valuable uses. But the market’s only measure of value is the profit that the investment returns, which means that financial markets will only serve the nation well if the most profitable investments are also the ones that drive innovation, create good jobs, promote domestic production, and ensure resilience and national security.

In recent decades, that link between the most profitable activities and the most productive ones has been broken. Rather than fund the growth of businesses in the real economy, Wall Street is now more likely to take cash back out of the businesses, even when that weakens their long-term prospects. Wall Street firms earn their profits through speculation and financial engineering, finding creative ways to generate profits from trading with other people’s money and manipulating the structure of businesses that others have already built.

Of particular concern are the private equity and hedge fund industries, which control trillions of dollars in capital and have collected hundreds of billions of dollars in fees while generating much higher levels of bankruptcy, lower wages for workers, and worse returns than simple index funds. The largest investors in these “alternative asset classes” are public pension funds controlled by political appointees and backstopped by taxpayers. In many cases, these managers appear to be paying exorbitant fees precisely because they appreciate the opacity and complexity of the investment products, which prevent them from being held accountable for performing well.

Wall Street’s dysfunction is harming American businesses and workers. Finance has become the most popular profession for graduates of top business schools, and it claims a wildly disproportionate share of the economy’s profits. Yet at the same time, investment has been declining economy-wide, and with it the innovation and productivity growth that lead to rising wages. For the American economy to boom again, financial markets will have to return to their proper role promoting productive investment.

Political Leaders

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Policy Proposals

Media

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