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On the Brink: Inside the Race to Stop the Collapse of the Global Financial System |  | Author: Henry M. Paulson Publisher: Business Plus Category: Book
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Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Pages: 496 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.7 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.2 x 1.6
ISBN: 0446561932 Dewey Decimal Number: 330.973 EAN: 9780446561938 ASIN: 0446561932
Publication Date: February 1, 2010 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Amazon.com Review When Hank Paulson, the former CEO of Goldman Sachs, was appointed in 2006 to become the nation's next Secretary of the Treasury, he knew that his move from Wall Street to Washington would be daunting and challenging.
But Paulson had no idea that a year later, he would find himself at the very epicenter of the world's most cataclysmic financial crisis since the Great Depression. Major institutions including Bear Stearns, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Lehman Brothers, AIG, Merrill Lynch, and Citigroup, among others-all steeped in rich, longstanding tradition-literally teetered at the edge of collapse. Panic ensnared international markets. Worst of all, the credit crisis spread to all parts of the U.S. economy and grew more ominous with each passing day, destroying jobs across America and undermining the financial security millions of families had spent their lifetimes building.
This was truly a once-in-a-lifetime economic nightmare. Events no one had thought possible were happening in quick succession, and people all over the globe were terrified that the continuing downward spiral would bring unprecedented chaos. All eyes turned to the United States Treasury Secretary to avert the disaster.
This, then, is Hank Paulson's first-person account. From the man who was in the very middle of this perfect economic storm, On the Brink is Paulson's fast-paced retelling of the key decisions that had to be made with lightning speed. Paulson puts the reader in the room for all the intense moments as he addressed urgent market conditions, weighed critical decisions, and debated policy and economic considerations with of all the notable players-including the CEOs of top Wall Street firms as well as Ben Bernanke, Timothy Geithner, Sheila Bair, Nancy Pelosi, Barney Frank, presidential candidates Barack Obama and John McCain, and then-President George W. Bush.
More than an account about numbers and credit risks gone bad, On the Brink is an extraordinary story about people and politics-all brought together during the world's impending financial Armageddon.
Read the Author's Note from On the Brink The pace of events during the financial crisis of 2008 was truly breathtaking. In this book, I have done my best to describe my actions and the thinking behind them during that time, and to convey the breakneck speed at which events were happening all around us. I believe the most important part of this story is the way Ben Bernanke, Tim Geithner, and I worked as a team through the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. There can't be many other examples of economic leaders managing a crisis who had as much trust in one another as we did. Our partnership proved to be an enormous asset during an incredibly difficult period. But at the same time, this is my story, and as hard as I have tried to reflect the contributions made by everyone involved, it is primarily about my work and that of my talented and dedicated team at Treasury. --Henry M. Paulson Amazon Interview: Henry M. Paulson on On the Brink We spoke with Henry M. Paulson in late January 2010, just before the release of On the Brink. You can listen to parts one and two of the Omnivoracious Podcast of the interview, and read a full transcript, in addition to these excerpts: Amazon.com: You accepted the job as Treasury secretary in 2006, with some reluctance. Did you have any idea what you were getting into? Paulson: I had a pretty clear idea that there would be a credit crisis sometime when I was in Washington. And I told the president I thought there'd be one, and the first major meeting I had with him I spent just talking about that topic. But I did not anticipate a crisis of the magnitude we faced--didn't anticipate that at all--and I certainly was bordering on naive in my understanding of the regulatory powers and authorities in Washington. Amazon.com: You talked about [Ben] Bernanke's great knowledge of history. How much of a guide could history be? Paulson: I can answer that two ways. First of all, history is a guide in one very real sense: that if you let the financial system collapse, and don't do enough to stave off disaster, the people who are going to suffer, the innocent victims, are going to be the American people. It's not going to be the banks, or the financial sector. So you need to do everything you can to put out the fire before it gets out of control. I think to that extent history was an important guide. Otherwise, there wasn't much you could learn from history. That's a big lesson, but we were dealing with a financial system and markets very different from what had existed many years ago. Huge concentration in the industry, so if you had two or three firms go down in succession you'd have a domino effect. The whole system could collapse, and it wouldn't take much to have unemployment levels equal to what we had at the Great Depression, and it could happen very quickly. And we didn't have the tools we needed to work with. The regulatory system hadn't been updated since the Great Depression, essentially; the regulatory authorities hadn't. We didn't have the authorities for dealing with major non-banks, and winding them down. So in many ways what were doing was we were dealing with--I said in the book--duct tape and baling wire. We were making do with the authorities we had, which were woefully inadequate. Amazon.com: And scrambling to get more authories. Paulson: And scrambling to get more authorities. And in many ways this book is the story of the collision of politics and markets, and it's the story of a race against time to get more authorities. And I think one of the things that really comes through in the book is all of the different elements of the crisis that were coming at us simultaneously. You could just see it. We could see it and it was one of the most frustrating--when I look at the things I could have done better, there were a lot of them and they come out in the book, but the communications challenges were huge. I mean, I sat there when the capital markets froze, before we went to Congress, and the money markets weren't working, and I just tried to think about how to explain this. Because I knew--I was seeing major, blue-chip industrial companies that were having trouble raising financing, so I knew with $3.4 trillion of money market funds, and with everything that was just getting ready to break apart, that if the system had collapsed there'd be thousands and thousands and thousands of mainstream industrial companies--middle-sized companies, large companies--that wouldn't be able to raise their short-term funding, finance their inventories, pay their people. People wouldn't have been able to pay their bills. This would have rippled through the economy. We would then have had--well, today we have over 10% unemployment. That's terrible. And that's after everything we've done. If the system had collapsed, when we were on the brink, unemployement easily could have been at the 25% level that we saw at the Great Depression, and the value destruction--much greater than we've had in terms of home prices and in terms of people's savings accounts and stock portfolios and so on. Amazon.com: And now it looks like 2010 is going to be the year that the Obama administration tackles financial reform. In the last section of your book you mention some lessons that you took out of the crisis. Paulson: Yeah, this is absolutely critical. And I am not shocked but very unhappy we don't have this yet, because people in this country are angry. Now they're very angry about bonuses and compensation levels on Wall Street, and rightfully so, after everything that's been done to save Wall Street. But what they should be angry about is that we have a system that made this necessary. And so what we need to do is we need to channel some of that anger toward fixing the system so never again do we have major financial institutions that are too big to fail. Amazon.com: And do you worry that the further we get from the crisis the harder it will be to make those necessary reforms? Paulson: Of course I do. The thing I worry about the most is I don't want another Treasury secretary to ever be sitting there like I was, without the tools and authorities you need to protect our country, protect our economy, and protect the people. It's a helpless feeling and it's a terrible feeling, and we should never be in this place. Our authorities need to be updated, our financial regulatory structure needs to be updated, and I'm optimistic about the future if we do this. If we don't, we will have another crisis. You always do. That's the history of mankind. If you go back, as long as we've had banks and financial institutions, there have been excesses, no matter how hard you try to avoid them, and there are going to be financial crises, and we need the tools in place and the regulatory system in place to be able to have a better visibility into what's going on and then be able to put out the fire when it starts, without costing the American people as much as this one did. Read the full interview.
Product Description Fast-paced and dramatic re-telling of the financial crisis that nearly bought the developed world to its knees. Hank Paulson was at the absolute epicentre of the recent economic storm, and his account of how he dealt with the greatest financial crisis since the Great Depression makes for absolutely fascinating reading. The book contains all the decisive moments in the economic crisis, including the pivotal meetings with mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, as well as Paulson's personal recollections of and conversations with President Bush, President Obama, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and current Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner. As well as detailing the major decisions taken during the crisis, Paulson also puts forth the policies he believes need to be implemented to take us securely into the future.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 86
Eye opening shows how politics almost let the financial system fail July 19, 2010 N. Tsantakis (Maryland) Many will question his motives by those who least understand the gravity of the situation. A Republican president George Bush, along with his Treasury Secretary knew that the right course of action was to save the financial system. The biggest obstacle was their own party. The House Republicans were willing to put ideology ahead of what was best for the country. This is coming from Paulson himself not some liberal media source.
What I found most fascinating was the John Boehner knew the gravity of the situation and was working with Nancy Pelosi to pass this bill. I think it goes to show that leadership is more important than populism. All the people out their who believe that these institutions should have failed are just inept at understanding the gravity of the situation. They will sight well you don't know but past history shows what happens during financial crisis of this magnitude. Look at the crisis of 1872 and the aftermath was a 12 yr depression. Also, the Great Depression is another example. George Bush did the right for once and ignored the stupid elements in his own party.
Funny Paulson had very little positive things to say about McCain. In fact he criticized McCain for using the bailouts as a political tool. This is from a Republican Treasury Secretary not Limbaugh, Levin or the other ass clowns people flock too.
Excellent factual account of the events that nearly broke America February 26, 2010 Mattoc24 (New Jersey) 3 out of 5 found this review helpful
This book was a well written account of the behind the scene decisions that helped save this country from another great depression. Whether you believe in all of the decisions made by Paulson, Bernanke, and Geitner it is hard to not appreciate the effort and reason that led to the decisions that were made. This book can be hard to understand for those not familiar with the nuts and bolts of financial products. For that reason, it is easy for a person to judge the decisions made based on what the media or politicians have told us. Hank Paulson is a truly great american who stepped up to the plate not for financial gain or power but because he knew that with his experience and financial expertise, the country needed him. None of us like the debt that the country and government is currently in but the result was not based on the decisions Bernanke and Paulson made but those that were made by the beurocrats in Washington.
Enjoyed Mr. Paulson's Account Tremendously March 4, 2010 Zachary Shrier (Los Angeles, CA) 3 out of 5 found this review helpful
True, it is one man's account. And Hank Paulson is not an objective observer of the events of 2007-2008. But I certainly got the sense that the man was making a good faith attempt to be honest, transparent, and candid in his retelling of this vital story. Well-written with a mimimum of jargon. Highly recommended.
Excellent "thriller" - well worth the time. March 4, 2010 Andrew White (Atlanta, United States) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
Hank Paulson pulls back some of the curtain that exposed his view of what took place mostly in 2008, as he battled through all manner of issues to help "save the system". This book does not explain fully how we got into the economic mess we find ourselves (it is not meant to); but this book reads like a "thriller" as Paulson writes, day by day, what happened, and the reasoning for his actions. I found the book well written, and hard to put down. Given I had read recently on Bear Sterns (Bear-Trap), and Lehman Brothers (A Colossal Failure of Common Sense), this was a nice additional book to further round out the view of what really happened. Of note, President Bush get's a lot of praise from Paulson for doing what was right, not what was expedient for his party. His interactions with John McCain and Barrack Obama, before and after the election, were illuminating. After watching last week's healthcare summit, where President Obama dressed McCain down "the election is over", some of Paulson stories seem very believable. Paulson makes very clear that Treasury, during the saving of Bear Sterns, would help protect exposed losses of any acquirer from the over valued assets. This helps make the deal for Bear Sterns doable. However, for Lehman, there is explicitly no such government support. Paulson says several times, "this deal [Lehman] is different as there was no buyer". Of course there was no buyer! When the Treasury says over and over again, "no support", what else would you expect? Paulson tried to encourage the market to save it's own competitor (privately funded pool), but that is very different to what was on offer during Bear Sterns collapse. Barclay's certainly came close to buying Lehman, but again, this came way too late in the process. If you read A Colossal Failure I get the feeling that Lehman's chairman and CEO, Dick Fauld, did not get on with Paulson. However, none of this seems reciprocated in Paulson's book. A Colossal Failure was written by an ex-employee of Lehman, so there is bound to be some sour grapes. But Dick Fauld's "they have to save me" persona seems to ring true. I get the feeling Paulson decided sometime, "We cant bail everyone out, so it might as well be Lehman that becomes the buck that breaks the cycle". The problem was no one could predict the impact. In the last chapter of Paulson's book he get's to talk about what he would do to protect the economy in the future; he talks about changes in policy, governance, and regulation. I would love to hear Paulson explore this list with Ron Paul: that should prove an interesting debate. Recommended 9 out of 10.
Three Blind Mice April 6, 2010 Sambo Gonzales (Undisclosed Location) 4 out of 7 found this review helpful
I read all 460 pages of this tome. I found it very interesting and informative. These pages describe how an unqualified Secretary of the Treasury, a highly skilled income tax cheat and an extremely intelligent and educated Professor of Economics rescue the United States on the brink of a nationwide financial meltdown caused by the criminal machinations of certain members of Congress who swap their votes for cash in an envelope.
The book unfortunately does not mention the activities of economist Philip Gramm which resulted in the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act, an action which eventually caused millions of Americans to lose their homes. It also does not mention Gramm's wife economist Wendy, who, as boss of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, ruled that the trading of derivatives was exempt from regulation. She was later sued for $168 million for her accomplishments as a director of Enron. Her ruling exempting derivatives from regulation directly lead to the crash of 2008 described in this book.
Henry Paulson graduated with a degree in English. This degree does not require the study of economics, mathematics, finance or anything remotely challenging. It is sufficient to get dressed in the morning and to show up in class. He utilized his football meat-head background and strong verbal skills to work his way up to CEO of Goldman Suchs. He was not a trader or a money maker, just a talker.
Tim Geithner studied Government and Asian Studies but mostly spent time learning to read and write Mandarin. His main claim to fame was his failure to pay the United States the taxes due on his income. According to Wikipedia, he cheated the United States out of $35,000 in self-employment taxes and was assessed additional taxes of $14,847 by the IRS. He was eventually charged $15,000 interest by the IRS but with no penalty - why?. Using his friendship with mentor Larry Summers, the dishonorably discharged ex-President of Harvard, he managed to be appointed president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. It is hard to understand why Obama would appoint an income tax cheat as Secretary of the Treasury with authority over the IRS.
Ben Bernanke brings a breath of fresh air into the story. Although the book does not specifically point it out, Bernanke's intelligence, education and experience brought knowledge, stability and judgment to the effort to rescue the U.S in the fourth quarter of 2008.
This effort, with the many sleepless nights, is well described in the book. The nerve-wracking effort to get the TARP program passed by Congress is well presented.
In the last pages of the book, Paulson states his conclusions and recommendations which are very reasonable and worthy of implementation. I particularly like his suggestion that we move from an income-taxed nation to a sales-taxed nation where big consumers pay big taxes and savers pay much less. It seems very sensible.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 86
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