Difference between revisions of "Erskine B. Bowles"
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− | [[Image:Erskine-Bowles200px.jpg|right|200px|frame|<center> Erskine B. Bowles</center>]]'''Erskine B. Bowles''' has been a director of [[Morgan Stanley]] since December 2005, during which time the bank was revealed to be a key player in the subprime mortgage crisis, received $10 billion in TARP bailout funds, and was secretly bailed out by the Federal Reserve with a massive infusion of funds. Read more about the role of Morgan Stanley in the financial crisis on Sourcewatch's Morgan Stanley page. | + | [[Image:Erskine-Bowles200px.jpg|right|200px|frame|<center> Erskine B. Bowles</center>]]'''Erskine B. Bowles''' is best known for his co-chairmanship of the Simpson-Bowles Commission and for being Bill Clinton’s chief of staff. He has been a director of [[Morgan Stanley]] since December 2005, during which time the bank was revealed to be a key player in the subprime mortgage crisis, received $10 billion in TARP bailout funds, and was secretly bailed out by the Federal Reserve with a massive infusion of funds. Read more about the role of [[Morgan Stanley]] in the financial crisis on Sourcewatch's [[Morgan Stanley]] page. |
Bowles was elected President of The [[University of North Carolina]] effective January 1, 2006. He has been a Senior Advisor to [[Carousel Capital]], a private investment firm, since September 2001, and served as a Managing Director from March 1999 to September 2001. Mr. Bowles was a General Partner of [[Forstmann Little & Co.]], a private investment firm, from March 1999 to September 2001. He served in the Administration of President Clinton as head of the Small Business Administration and White House Chief of Staff. He was the [[United Nations]] Deputy Special Envoy for Tsunami Recovery with the rank of Under Secretary General in 2005. Mr. Bowles worked at Morgan Stanley from July 1969 to January 1972. He is a director at [[General Motors]] Corporation, Cousins Properties Incorporated and North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company. A graduate of The University of North Carolina, he has an MBA from Columbia." <ref>[http://www.morganstanley.com/about/company/governance/board.html Directors], Morgan Stanley, accessed September 4, 2008.</ref> | Bowles was elected President of The [[University of North Carolina]] effective January 1, 2006. He has been a Senior Advisor to [[Carousel Capital]], a private investment firm, since September 2001, and served as a Managing Director from March 1999 to September 2001. Mr. Bowles was a General Partner of [[Forstmann Little & Co.]], a private investment firm, from March 1999 to September 2001. He served in the Administration of President Clinton as head of the Small Business Administration and White House Chief of Staff. He was the [[United Nations]] Deputy Special Envoy for Tsunami Recovery with the rank of Under Secretary General in 2005. Mr. Bowles worked at Morgan Stanley from July 1969 to January 1972. He is a director at [[General Motors]] Corporation, Cousins Properties Incorporated and North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company. A graduate of The University of North Carolina, he has an MBA from Columbia." <ref>[http://www.morganstanley.com/about/company/governance/board.html Directors], Morgan Stanley, accessed September 4, 2008.</ref> | ||
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+ | ==Executive Summary== | ||
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+ | '''Erskine Bowles''' is best known for his co-chairmanship of the Simpson-Bowles Commission and for being Bill Clinton’s chief of staff. He has deep ties to the financial industry, which has lobbied heavily on tax issues<ref>Lynn Hume, [http://www.bondbuyer.com/issues/121_199/irs-releases-lobbying-group-amounts-for-muni-groups-spending-1044938-1.html "Industry Groups Spend Millions on Lobbying; States & Locals Not So Much"], ''The Bond Buyer'', October 15, 2012.</ref> and created 10,000 units worldwide to avoid taxes and regulation<ref>Yalman Onaran, [http://www.bondbuyer.com/issues/121_199/irs-releases-lobbying-group-amounts-for-muni-groups-spending-1044938-1.html "U.S. Banks Spawn 10,000 Units Worldwide to Cut Taxes"], ''Bloomberg'', accessed July 22, 2012.</ref> (with Morgan Stanley and JP Morgan Chase in the lead). | ||
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+ | Bowles is currently on the board of Morgan Stanley<ref>Morgan Stanley, [http://www.morganstanley.com/about/company/governance/board.html "Morgan Stanley Corporate Governance"], organizational website, accessed January 1, 2013.</ref> (as is Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget board member Laura D’Andrea Tyson), for which he reportedly receives $350,000 a year.<ref>Center for Economic and Policy Research, [http://www.cepr.net/index.php/blogs/beat-the-press/why-is-it-relevant-that-epi-gets-money-from-teacher-unions-but-its-not-relevant-that-erskine-bowles-gets-350000-a-year-from-morgan-stanley "Why Is It Relevant That EPI Gets Money from Teacher Unions, But It's Not Relevant That Erskine Bowles Gets $350,000 a Year from Morgan Stanley?"], June 28, 2011.</ref> | ||
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+ | Bowles is also an adviser to BDT Capital partners, a Chicago-based investment banking services firm. Bowles was also on the board of directors of [[Merck]] and of [[General Motors]] in the years preceding its federal government rescue.<ref>Jeff Green, [http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=ayajleq.ajMk&refer=news "GM Director Bowles Is Said to Offer His Resignation"], ''Bloomberg'', April 2, 2009.</ref> | ||
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+ | Bowles is currently on Norfolk Southern’s board<ref>Norfolk Southern, [http://www.nscorp.com/nscportal/nscorp/Media/Corporate%20Profile/#2/ "Norfolk Southern Corporate Profile"], organizational website, accessed January 1, 2013.</ref> and on Facebook’s board.<ref>Facebook, [http://investor.fb.com/directors.cfm "Board of Directors"], organizational website, accessed January 1, 2013.</ref> | ||
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+ | His wife, Crandall C. Bowles, is on the executive committee of the board of directors of JP Morgan Chase,<ref name="Crandall Bio">JP Morgan Chase, [http://www.jpmorganchase.com/corporate/About-JPMC/board-of-directors.htm#bowles "Board of Directors"], organizational website, accessed January 1, 2013.</ref> whose chief executive, [[Jamie Dimon]], has said he is a “major backer” of [[Fix the Debt]] and would “do whatever it takes” to help the campaign.<ref>Zachary A. Goldfarb, [http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/ceos-warn-obama-congress-to-avoid-fiscal-cliff/2012/10/18/6aeb7186-1914-11e2-aa6f-3b636fecb829_story.html "CEOs warn Obama, Congress to avoid 'fiscal cliff'"], ''The Washington Post'', October 18, 2012.</ref> | ||
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+ | Erskine Bowles’ Morgan Stanley bio notes that “he has been a Senior Advisor to Carousel Capital, a private investment firm, since September 2001, and served as a Managing Director from March 1999 to September 2001. Mr. Bowles was a General Partner of Forstmann Little & Co.,<ref>Jay McIneryney, [http://nymag.com/nymetro/news/crimelaw/features/9472/ "Other People's Money"], ''New York Magazine'', May 21, 2005.</ref> a private investment firm, from March 1999 to September 2001.” Bowles is also a former member of Wachovia’s board of directors,<ref>Dean Baler and Eric Hoyt, [http://www.cepr.net/index.php/blogs/cepr-blog/the-erskine-bowles-stock-index "The Erskine Bowles Stock Index"], ''Center for Economic and Policy Research'', September 4, 2012.</ref> as was his wife Crandall Bowles.<ref name="Crandall Bio"/> He is also on the board of [[Fix the Debt]]’s parent organization, the [[Pete Peterson]]-funded [[Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget]]. | ||
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+ | ==Ties to 'Fix the Debt'== | ||
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+ | Bowles' $350,000 a year compensation for sitting on the board of Morgan Stanley is not noted on his Fix the Debt bio and is almost never mentioned in the media interviews he gives for Fix the Debt. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Bowles is on the board of [[Fix the Debt]]’s parent organization, the [[Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget]]. | ||
==Morgan Stanley and Other Wall Street Ties== | ==Morgan Stanley and Other Wall Street Ties== | ||
− | While Erskine Bowles was Chief of Staff for a time for President Bill Clinton and attempted to run for office himself a few times in his native state of North Carolina, he has spent most of his career as a financial | + | While Erskine Bowles was Chief of Staff for a time for President Bill Clinton and attempted to run for office himself a few times in his native state of North Carolina, he has spent most of his career as a financial advisor on Wall Street. |
In 2012, Bowles was a senior financial advisor to the private equity firm, BDT Capital. Previously he worked for a series of private investment firms, Carousel Capital LLC , Forstmann Little & Co , although he began his career in corporate finance at Morgan Stanley according to [http://www.forbes.com/profile/erskine-bowles/ Forbes.] | In 2012, Bowles was a senior financial advisor to the private equity firm, BDT Capital. Previously he worked for a series of private investment firms, Carousel Capital LLC , Forstmann Little & Co , although he began his career in corporate finance at Morgan Stanley according to [http://www.forbes.com/profile/erskine-bowles/ Forbes.] |
Revision as of 19:40, 2 January 2013
Erskine B. Bowles is best known for his co-chairmanship of the Simpson-Bowles Commission and for being Bill Clinton’s chief of staff. He has been a director of Morgan Stanley since December 2005, during which time the bank was revealed to be a key player in the subprime mortgage crisis, received $10 billion in TARP bailout funds, and was secretly bailed out by the Federal Reserve with a massive infusion of funds. Read more about the role of Morgan Stanley in the financial crisis on Sourcewatch's Morgan Stanley page.
Bowles was elected President of The University of North Carolina effective January 1, 2006. He has been a Senior Advisor to Carousel Capital, a private investment firm, since September 2001, and served as a Managing Director from March 1999 to September 2001. Mr. Bowles was a General Partner of Forstmann Little & Co., a private investment firm, from March 1999 to September 2001. He served in the Administration of President Clinton as head of the Small Business Administration and White House Chief of Staff. He was the United Nations Deputy Special Envoy for Tsunami Recovery with the rank of Under Secretary General in 2005. Mr. Bowles worked at Morgan Stanley from July 1969 to January 1972. He is a director at General Motors Corporation, Cousins Properties Incorporated and North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company. A graduate of The University of North Carolina, he has an MBA from Columbia." [1]
Contents
Executive Summary
Erskine Bowles is best known for his co-chairmanship of the Simpson-Bowles Commission and for being Bill Clinton’s chief of staff. He has deep ties to the financial industry, which has lobbied heavily on tax issues[2] and created 10,000 units worldwide to avoid taxes and regulation[3] (with Morgan Stanley and JP Morgan Chase in the lead).
Bowles is currently on the board of Morgan Stanley[4] (as is Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget board member Laura D’Andrea Tyson), for which he reportedly receives $350,000 a year.[5]
Bowles is also an adviser to BDT Capital partners, a Chicago-based investment banking services firm. Bowles was also on the board of directors of Merck and of General Motors in the years preceding its federal government rescue.[6]
Bowles is currently on Norfolk Southern’s board[7] and on Facebook’s board.[8]
His wife, Crandall C. Bowles, is on the executive committee of the board of directors of JP Morgan Chase,[9] whose chief executive, Jamie Dimon, has said he is a “major backer” of Fix the Debt and would “do whatever it takes” to help the campaign.[10]
Erskine Bowles’ Morgan Stanley bio notes that “he has been a Senior Advisor to Carousel Capital, a private investment firm, since September 2001, and served as a Managing Director from March 1999 to September 2001. Mr. Bowles was a General Partner of Forstmann Little & Co.,[11] a private investment firm, from March 1999 to September 2001.” Bowles is also a former member of Wachovia’s board of directors,[12] as was his wife Crandall Bowles.[9] He is also on the board of Fix the Debt’s parent organization, the Pete Peterson-funded Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.
Ties to 'Fix the Debt'
Bowles' $350,000 a year compensation for sitting on the board of Morgan Stanley is not noted on his Fix the Debt bio and is almost never mentioned in the media interviews he gives for Fix the Debt.
Bowles is on the board of Fix the Debt’s parent organization, the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.
Morgan Stanley and Other Wall Street Ties
While Erskine Bowles was Chief of Staff for a time for President Bill Clinton and attempted to run for office himself a few times in his native state of North Carolina, he has spent most of his career as a financial advisor on Wall Street.
In 2012, Bowles was a senior financial advisor to the private equity firm, BDT Capital. Previously he worked for a series of private investment firms, Carousel Capital LLC , Forstmann Little & Co , although he began his career in corporate finance at Morgan Stanley according to Forbes.
Bowles started his career at Morgan Stanley. He later served as a board member of Morgan Stanley through out the entire financial crisis, a firm that was implicated in all the activities that lead to the 2008 financial crisis.
In 2006 the bank bought Saxon Capital, dubbed the “King of Subprime” loans so that Morgan Stanley could gain access to subprime mortgages and repackage them into complex investment vehicles. When the crash came Morgan teetered on the brink. It borrowed $10 billion from the TARP bailout programs and paid the money back with great fanfare in January 2009. However it was revealed later that the bank was secretly bailed out by the Federal Reserve to the tune of $100 billion, an amount only discovered by a Bloomberg News lawsuit against the Federal Reserve.
Subsequently, the firm doled out millions since to settle claims of electricity price fixing and for engaging in illegal off-exchange trading. The trouble never ends at Morgan Stanley,in 2012 they were sued by the ACLU for violating civil rights laws by encouraging a lender to push more expensive and risky mortgages on black neighborhoods in Detroit.
The Commission on Fiscal Responsibility
In 2010, Bowles co-chaired, along with Alan Simpson, the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform, which put forward a deficit reduction plan that generated a great deal of controversy. The plan included 70 recommendations on raising taxes and cutting programs, but it failed to garner majority support of the Commission. A report was released on December 1, 2010,[3] but failed a vote on December 3 with 11 of 18 votes in favor, with a supermajority of 14 votes needed to formally endorse the blueprint.[4] FN WIKI In January 2010, that bill failed in the Senate by a vote of 53–46, when six Republicans who had co-sponsored it--joined with 23 Democratic Senators in the Senate at large--nevertheless voted against it.
The plan contained painful austerity measures that critics contended would further weaken the economic recovery. The plan called for cuts in benefits for the elderly, veterans, and many government employees. Most importantly it would have cut the Social Security “cost of living” or COLA increase. Reduced COLA would amount to a benefit cut of close to 3% for a typical retired worker. Since the median income for households of people over age 65 is just $31,000, this would be a big hit to a segment of the population that is already struggling. [13]
Under Consideration as U.S. Treasury Secretary
Bowles has made many short lists for replacing U.S. Treasury Secretary Tim Geither in President Obama’s second term in office.
Economist Dean Baker comments: “Erskine Bowles gives us a real trifecta. He used his position as co-chair of President Obama's deficit commission to protect Wall Street. He pockets millions as part of a flawed system of corporate governance that allows CEOs to rip off the companies they run. And he wants to reduce social security benefits for seniors who are already living on the edge.”
JP Morgan Chase
Bowles wife, Crandall C. Bowles, sits on the board of directors of JP Morgan Chase. From her bio there: Ms. Bowles has been Chairman of Springs Industries, Inc., a manufacturer of window products for the home, since 1998 and a member of its board since 1978. From 1998 until 2006, she was also Chief Executive Officer of Springs Industries, Inc. Subsequent to a spinoff and merger in 2006, she was Co-Chairman and Co-CEO of Springs Global Participacoes S.A., a textile home furnishings company based in Brazil, until July 2007. Ms. Bowles is a director of Deere & Company (since 1999 and previously from 1990 to 1994) and of Sara Lee Corporation (since 2008). She previously served as a director of Wachovia Corporation (1991-1996).
Resources and articles
Related Sourcewatch articles
References
- ↑ Directors, Morgan Stanley, accessed September 4, 2008.
- ↑ Lynn Hume, "Industry Groups Spend Millions on Lobbying; States & Locals Not So Much", The Bond Buyer, October 15, 2012.
- ↑ Yalman Onaran, "U.S. Banks Spawn 10,000 Units Worldwide to Cut Taxes", Bloomberg, accessed July 22, 2012.
- ↑ Morgan Stanley, "Morgan Stanley Corporate Governance", organizational website, accessed January 1, 2013.
- ↑ Center for Economic and Policy Research, "Why Is It Relevant That EPI Gets Money from Teacher Unions, But It's Not Relevant That Erskine Bowles Gets $350,000 a Year from Morgan Stanley?", June 28, 2011.
- ↑ Jeff Green, "GM Director Bowles Is Said to Offer His Resignation", Bloomberg, April 2, 2009.
- ↑ Norfolk Southern, "Norfolk Southern Corporate Profile", organizational website, accessed January 1, 2013.
- ↑ Facebook, "Board of Directors", organizational website, accessed January 1, 2013.
- ↑ Jump up to: 9.0 9.1 JP Morgan Chase, "Board of Directors", organizational website, accessed January 1, 2013.
- ↑ Zachary A. Goldfarb, "CEOs warn Obama, Congress to avoid 'fiscal cliff'", The Washington Post, October 18, 2012.
- ↑ Jay McIneryney, "Other People's Money", New York Magazine, May 21, 2005.
- ↑ Dean Baler and Eric Hoyt, "The Erskine Bowles Stock Index", Center for Economic and Policy Research, September 4, 2012.
- ↑ Baker, Dean. Erskine Bowles: An Object Lesson Accessed 10/15/2012