The film begins by examining the effects of the government of
Iceland's shift toward
deregulation in 2000, which included the
privatization of its banks. When
Lehman Brothers went bankrupt and
AIG collapsed, Iceland and the rest of the world went into a global recession.
Part I: How We Got Here The American financial industry was regulated from 1941 to 1981, followed by a long period of deregulation. At the end of the 1980s, a
savings and loan crisis cost taxpayers approximately $124 billion. In the late 1990s, the financial sector had consolidated into a few giant firms. In March 2000, the
Internet stock bubble burst because investment banks promoted Internet companies they knew would fail, resulting in $5 trillion in investor losses. In the 1990s,
derivatives became popular in the industry and added instability. Efforts to regulate derivatives were thwarted by the
Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000, backed by several key officials. In the 2000s, the industry was dominated by five investment banks (
Goldman Sachs,
Morgan Stanley,
Lehman Brothers,
Merrill Lynch, and
Bear Stearns), two financial conglomerates (
Citigroup and
JPMorgan Chase), three
securitized insurance companies (
AIG,
MBIA,
AMBAC) and
the three rating agencies (
Moody's,
Standard & Poor's, and
Fitch). Investment banks bundled mortgages with other loans and debts into
collateralized debt obligations (CDOs), which they sold to investors. Rating agencies gave many CDOs
AAA ratings.
Subprime loans led to
predatory lending. Many home owners were given loans they could never repay.
Part II: The Bubble (2001–2007) During the housing boom, the ratio of money borrowed by investment banks versus the banks' own assets reached unprecedented levels. Speculators could buy
credit default swaps (CDSs), which were akin to an insurance policy, to bet against CDOs they did not own. Numerous CDOs were backed by subprime mortgages. Goldman-Sachs sold more than $3 billion worth of CDOs in the first half of 2006. Goldman also bet against the low-value CDOs, telling investors they were high-quality. The three biggest ratings agencies contributed to the problem, with AAA-rated instruments rocketing from a mere handful in 2000 to over 4,000 in 2006. There were some warnings about the growing risks in the financial system, including from
Raghuram Rajan, then the chief economist of the
IMF, who, at the
Federal Reserve's 2005
Jackson Hole conference, identified some risks and proposed policies to address them, though former
U.S. Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers called his warnings "misguided" and Rajan himself a "
luddite".
Part III: The Crisis The market for CDOs collapsed and investment banks were left with hundreds of billions of dollars in loans, CDOs, and real estate they could not unload. The
Great Recession began in November 2007, and in March 2008, Bear Stearns ran out of cash. In September, the federal government took over
Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, which had been on the brink of collapse. Two days later, Lehman Brothers collapsed. These entities all had AA or AAA ratings within days of being bailed out. Merrill Lynch, on the edge of collapse, was acquired by
Bank of America.
Henry Paulson and
Timothy Geithner decided that Lehman must go into bankruptcy, which resulted in a collapse of the
commercial paper market. On September 17, the insolvent AIG was taken over by the government. The next day, Paulson and Fed chairman
Ben Bernanke asked Congress for $700 billion to bail out the banks. The
global financial system became paralyzed. On October 3, 2008, President
George W. Bush signed the
Troubled Asset Relief Program, but global stock markets continued to fall. Layoffs and foreclosures continued with unemployment rising to 10% in the US and the
European Union. By December 2008,
GM and
Chrysler also faced bankruptcy. Foreclosures in the U.S. reached unprecedented levels.
Part IV: Accountability Top executives of the insolvent companies walked away with their personal fortunes intact and avoided prosecution. The executives had hand-picked their
boards of directors, which handed out billions in bonuses after the government bailout. The major banks grew in power and doubled anti-reform efforts. Many academic economists who had advocated for deregulation for decades and helped shape U.S. policy still opposed reform following the
2008 financial crisis. Firms involved were the
Analysis Group,
Charles River Associates,
Compass Lexecon, and the Law and Economics Consulting Group (
LECG). Many of these economists were paid consultants to companies and other groups involved in the financial crisis, conflicts of interest that were often not disclosed in their research papers.
Part V: Where We Are Now Tens of thousands of U.S. factory workers were laid off. The incoming
Obama administration's financial reforms were weak, and there was no significant proposed regulation of the practices of ratings agencies, lobbyists, or executive compensation. Geithner became Treasury Secretary.
Martin Feldstein,
Laura Tyson, and
Lawrence Summers were all top economic advisers to Obama. Bernanke was reappointed
Chair of the Federal Reserve. European nations imposed strict regulations on bank compensation, but the U.S. resisted them. ==Interviewees==