Posts Tagged ‘Bayer’
“Money is a servant to politicians and the country. But, if the politicians and the country become the servant of the money, the politicians have failed.”*…

Given all that’s going on in the current adminsitration, it’s hard to keep track of the havoc. Here, an update on a drama playing out in the legislature (with heavy White House involvement).
Crypto interests came after the local banker last week in a bitter Congressional fight. As Matt Stoller explains, they didn’t win, but it’s not over…
… [Last] Thursday, the Senate Banking Committee abruptly canceled its meeting, known as a mark-up, to write little-noticed legislation to deregulate the financial system. And the reason is that two of the more powerful forces in D.C. – the banking lobby and the new MAGA-powered crypto world – came into conflict. The result, so far, is a stalemate.
I haven’t written about crypto for a few years, because there’s not much to say beyond “they did a lot of bribes in a bribe-prone system.” But depending on what happens next, we could be looking at the end of an iconic American figure, the local banker, and his or her replacement with something very different. The context of the legislative fight is, as you see in lots of other areas, the decline of the productive institutional fabric of America.
Culturally speaking, banks have a weird place in America, as they are the institutions that control permission to use resources. The endless number of bank heist movies, often with plucky burglars as heroic figures telling bank customers they needn’t worry because it’s not their money at risk, suggests that there’s a lot of skepticism of financial power in general. But there are two types of bankers, the generous local elite and the extractive beancounter. These represent a traditional populist vs oligarch framework.
Take the holiday classic film It’s a Wonderful Life. It’s about a small town banker named George Bailey, played by Jimmy Stewart. Bailey’s help financing useful things in Bedford Falls, like houses and businesses, contrasts with the avaricious Harry Potter, who is a stand-in for Wall Street.
There’s a reason for these cultural totems. Americans have always understood that distant control of credit is dangerous, the theme of movies such as Wall Street, Margin Call, and The Big Short. They also see that local control of credit and payments is key to self-sufficiency. Local banks uses to be, and to some extent still are, the powerhouse of American cities and towns.
That said, there have always been a variety of financial institutions to serve different kinds of customers, including large corporations. There are three kinds of banks in America, the small bank, the regional bank spanning a few states, and a few dozen national mega-banks. Local banks, a la George Bailey, are more efficient with better service and more commercial lending. According to the Institute for Local Self-Reliance, roughly half of U.S. assets were held in small banks, which did most of the productive lending. In 2020, small and regionals held just 17% of industry assets, but offered 46% of bank lending to new and growing businesses.
In the post-war era, this mix of banking was relatively stable, with roughly fourteen thousand local banks and thrifts serving as mortgage and commercial lenders, and check clearing institutions. But in the early 1980s, policymakers sought to consolidate the sector, enacting a series of deregulatory laws to encourage bank failures and mergers. The result is that today we have fewer than four thousand banks, and by the end of the Trump administration, we may have fewer than a thousand.
Of course, the world isn’t the same as it was forty five years ago. Since the 1980s, finance has changed. We are a capital markets driven economy, not a bank-driven one, and we use credit cards not checks, apps and ATMs more than branches. Bailouts have replaced proactive regulation, and we now have four giant Too Big to Fail banks that span multiple lines of business from investment banking to brokerage services. But local economies still depend on local banks, and there are fewer and fewer of them…
… Banking is a great business, because mostly you pay customers a small amount for the use of their money, and get the government to guarantee you a profit. You can make more if you actually do the work to lend money, but you don’t have to.
In return for this easy profit via a government safety net, bankers accept regulation. As the brilliant scholar Saule Omarova notes, the best way to understand banks is as franchises from the government. Bankers safeguard the nation’s money and payments system, and are well-paid for it, but it’s fundamentally a public and not a private duty. That’s why there are banking charters from the state.
The rise of crypto parallels the consolidation and corruption of banking. From the 1980s onward, small town bankers, like everyone else during the neoliberal era, became heavily oriented around removing rules against speculation and froth. The low interest rate environment of the New Deal gave way to a high interest rate world, and that put enormous pressure on the balance sheets of bankers who had lent money more cheaply. That, plus the turn of the Democrats away from protecting small towns in favor of consumer rights, led to a sharp anti-government sentiment among local bankers…
[Stoller unpacks the history of banking the last few decades and then turns to crypto…]
… While anti-monopolists argued for a renewal of public institutions to tamp down on concentrations of wealth and power, the crypto world went the opposite way, arguing that it was the very existence and power of public institutions that led to the crisis in the first place.
Crypto was ideological, at first framed around utopian rhetoric and the blockchain. Unfortunately, there were no actual real use cases for productive ends, it was entirely a way of scamming or speculating without rules. During the 2010s, when the Federal Reserve kept interest rates at zero and engineered a set of bubbles, crypto was one of the more prominent ones. In 2021, I wrote an article titled “Cryptocurrencies: A Necessary Scam” describing the ideological goal of crypto.
Fortunately, regulators kept crypto hived off from the real economy, so as the bubble blew up, it didn’t much matter. In 2022, when Sam Bankman-Fried and a host of crypto institutions collapsed in an orgy of fraud and leverage and money laundering and sanctions evasions, crypto seemed to be over. But it wasn’t, because of the power of the banking lobby, the weakness of Joe Biden’s administration, and the general pro-deregulation consensus in Congress…
… After Biden, the crypto industry had immense political leverage over a supine Congress and a friendly administration. Concerns over things like consumer protection ended, of course, but even more “serious” things like worries over national security and sanctions evaporated. Trump pardoned the Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao, and no one cared any longer that crypto was used to funnel money to Hamas and Venezuela.
The narrative around crypto changed, as crypto proponents dropped their naive ideological arguments. Industry proponents no longer argued there’s anything innovative, or that crypto is important for payments or any other purpose. It’s purely a mechanism to speculate. And the industry ended its commitment to a stateless approach. The trading side of crypto attacked stock market regulations, while the banking side demanded access to the banking franchise, including bank charters, access to the Federal Reserve safety net, and so forth. They started claiming they are bank-like, only better, and that the current banking order is lazy and protected by regulation.
And that brings us to the legislative fight last week. A few months ago, Congress did its first set of favors for the crypto industry, passing the Genius Act, which allowed for companies to issue “stablecoins,” which is to say, they can take dollar deposits as long as they back those deposits with actual dollars. However, they were mostly barred from paying interest on stablecoins. And the payment of interest on deposits is really key, because that’s what would allow stablecoin issuers and crypto exchanges to compete with banks over those cheap customer deposits that enable profits. It is an existential problem, not for the JP Morgan’s of the world, as they are so big it doesn’t matter, but for the rest of the banking sector, the local and community guys.
The most aggressive crypto firm, Coinbase, sort of offers interest on deposits, with what are called “rewards.” By calling them rewards instead of interest, Coinbase is trying to create a loophole in the Genius Act. But it’s a grey area, at best, and regulators could crack down.
The next piece of legislation pushed by the crypto world was called the Clarity Act, which has a number of elements, some of them involving rules around speculation. If it passes, we can expect very little regulation of the stock market, anti-money laundering, or insider trading going forward. But the fight that led to the cancelation of the markup of the Clarity Act is whether “rewards,” aka interest on deposits, are legal. Enter the banking lobby.
Community and regional bankers are not used to fighting with conservatives, because they haven’t had to. They did block liberal lawyer Omarova from becoming the bank regulator at the Office of Comptroller of the Currency. But they certainly aren’t used to dealing with feral and weird crypto MAGA online influencers with billions of dollars. That doesn’t make sense to them. And it should have been obvious that they were in the crosshairs of the crypto industry; the Federal Reserve just launched a rulemaking to give crypto a mini bank charter, which should scare the hell out of the local banks.
But they finally have started to get in gear, pointing to a Treasury report saying that $6.6 trillion of deposits might leave the banking system if crypto companies could pay interest on stablecoins. The Independent Community Bankers Association, the trade group for local bankers, mobilized its members against stablecoin rewards.
Much of the crypto world doesn’t care about stablecoins or banking; they are interested in removing the rules regulating speculation and gambling. For them, it’s a securities law matter. But for Coinbase, which makes roughly a billion dollars in revenue with stablecoins, that part of the bill does matter. And so Brian Armstrong pulled his support for the bill on the eve of the markup. There’s something a bit odd about Coinbase’s opposition, since they got 95% of what they wanted, and everyone else is fine with the legislation. But I don’t want to speculate too much on motivations, the point is Armstrong was unhappy with the final bill.
It’s not clear what happens now. The Senate Banking Committee has put enormous time and effort into this legislation, at the behest of crypto donors. But it really is an zero sum fight. If crypto exchanges can pay interest or rewards on stablecoins, then local banks lose their deposit base. If crypto exchanges can’t, then they won’t get access to cheap deposits. While Senators are desperate for some sort of compromise, it doesn’t look like there is one. Someone has to win and someone has to lose.
This battle is one where there is no good guy, but if there’s someone who is less bad, it would be the local bankers. They at least do lend into communities, and are subject to real regulation. Crypto is a disaster, and if we integrate crypto into the real economy, they will eventually demand their own bailout. But the critique that banks don’t pay much in interest on accounts is accurate. Furthermore, the credit card business is a bloated monopolistic mess. Still, those problems are largely about the Too Big to Fail banks, not the local guys, and the TBTF banks will be fine regardless.
Honestly, I’m exhausted by the question that we are forced to answer in this fight. Should credit allocation and payments be controlled by a set of lazy right-wing bankers who hate government, or a hungrier and deeply corrupt group of crypto scammers? It would be nice to have an alternative to those two interest groups. And eventually, we will, since it’s becoming clear that the state will have to take a much bigger role in credit allocation. But for now, the fact that crypto finally got stopped, at least temporarily, by the banking lobby, well at least it’s funny. And it does show how checks and balances are useful even when everyone involved is deeply flawed.
At this moment, I’ll take what I can get…
The end of an era? “The Slow Death of Banking in America,” from @mattstoller.skystack.xyz.
Pair with Molly White‘s “They’ve bought themselves a Congress” (“Coinbase calls the shots in the Senate…”) and from Matt Levine: “Stablecoin Narrow Banking” (“one solution here is to allow stablecoins to pay interest (like banks) but also impose capital requirements (like banks). I would not bet on that happening though…”) “Memecoin Venture Capital,” (“… today I want to talk about the fourth category, tokens promising no rights…”)
* Oliver Kemper
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As we hollow out our mattresses, we might send painless birthday greetings to Felix Hoffman; he was born on this date in 1868. A chemist for the German chemical and pharmaceutical company Bayer, he sythesized both acetylsalicylic acid (ASA), which Bayer marketed as “aspirin,” and diamorphine, which was popularized under the Bayer trade name “heroin.”
“And God said, Behold, I have given you every herb bearing seed, which is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree, in the which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed”*…
The first patent on an animal was granted in the U.S. in 1988. But the first agricultural patents date back to 1930 and the Plant Patent Act (PPA). Since then, patent protection on seeds has been both broadened and lengthened; in the 1980’s, protection was extended beyond “utility” (a plant that uniquely did one thing or another) to the living thing itself. And the seed industry has consolidated…
For years Haribhai Devjibhai Patel has been growing cotton, peanuts and potatoes in the western Indian state of Gujarat. For years he and his family have used seedlings from one harvest to plant the next year’s crops on his four acre field.
Last year he planted a new potato variety known as FC5. It was a decision that ultimately landed him in court, because the US company PepsiCo had already claimed the rights to that very same potato variety. Patel claims he wasn’t aware of the potato’s name, much less PepsiCo’s claim…
According to the plaintiffs’ lawyer, Anand Yadnik, the lawsuit alleges that the FC5 potato is especially bred for PepsiCo’s subsidiary company Lays and their internationally distributed product: potato chips. PepsiCo was seeking 10 million Rupies or $140.000 (€ 126.000).
“I was completely devastated. I was afraid. Not in my lifetime would I ever have been able to pay the kind of damages that were being claimed by PepsiCo,” Patel said. The 46-year-old farmer has two children and earns around $3,500 per year.
The lawsuit was based on findings that PepsiCo gathered from Patel’s field. According to his lawyer, the company hired a private detective agency to provide the data. “They took secret video footage and collected samples from farmers fields’ sans disclosing their real intent”…
The case is another example of an ongoing global trend of companies claiming property rights for plants or genetic material of plants across the globe.
“Resources that used to be available to mankind as a community have now been confined to privatization,” Judith Düesberg from NGO Gene Ethical Network… The number of patents on plants worldwide has increased a hundredfold from just under 120 in 1990 to 12,000 today – 3500 of them are registered in Europe,according to the European initiative No-Patents-On-Seeds…
Critics argue that patents block access to genetic material for farmers and minimize biodiversity, the diversity of species and increase farmers’ dependency on seed producers.
But Bayer, Monsanto’s parent company, told DW in a written statement: “Farmers have the choice of whether and which products they buy from which supplier. [… ] Each farmer decides freely. […] Farmers will only use our products if they gain a clear advantage.”
In Europe, a case involving Monsanto and a particular breed of melon drew media attention several years ago. Monsanto had discovered that an Indian melon variety was naturally resistant to a specific virus. At the European Patent Office it then successfully applied for a patent on that trait after breeding into other melons.
From this moment on, not only did this trait belong to Monsanto, but so did every melon variety containing it, including the Indian melon from which it originated. Patent opponents call this practice biopiracy…
According to the Indian-based market research agency Mordor Intelligence, revenue in the seed sector will reach $90 billion by 2024 compared to about $60 billion in 2018. And over 50% of the worldwide market share is in the hands of Bayer-Monsanto, Du Pont and Syngenta…
The UN report “The right to food” has raised concerns about food security caused by “the oligopolistic structure of the input providers” warning that it could also cause food prices to increase and deprive the poorest of food.
A further concern is who owns the seeds and who produces the food. According to the NGO Germanwatch, most of the seed producing industry comes from the Global North, but 90% of biological resources (agricultural products, natural materials come) from the Global South.
While patenting laws remain more restrictive in the Global South, an Oxfam Study shows that big global players appear to be finding loopholes…
A few companies are angling to sew up the world’s seed supply: “Patents on plants: Is the sellout of genes a threat to farmers and global food security?“
* Genesis, 1:29 (KJV)
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As we reap what we sow, we might send well-organized birthday greetings to Antoine Laurent de Jussieu; he was born on this date in 1748. A botanist, he is best remembered as the first to publish a natural classification of flowering plants; much of his system– which was, in part, based on unpublished work by his uncle, Bernard de Jussieu— remains in use today.

“In wine there is Wisdom, in beer there is Freedom, in water there is bacteria”*…

Alcohol has been a prime mover of human culture from the beginning, fueling the development of arts, language, and religion: “Our 9,000-Year Love Affair With Booze.”
* Mark Twain
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As we meditate on mead, we might send analgesic birthday greetings to Felix Hoffmann; he was born on this date in 1868. A chemist, he is best remembered for re-synthesizing diamorphine (independently from C.R. Alder Wright who synthesized it 23 years earlier), which was popularized under the Bayer trade name of “heroin.” He is also credited with synthesizing aspirin (though whether he did this at his own initiative or under the instruction of Arthur Eichengrün is highly contested).





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