
The
global economic recession of 2008 did not begin with events that
occurred in 2008 but it was triggered by some of them. The most
easy to identify were sales of mortgages in huge numbers to individuals
who were not (and are not) able to repay them. In this process a
phenomenon even more damaging to the fragile economic structure
(although Citigroup with $2 trillion in revenue did not look fragile at
the time) occurred and was inseparable from the sale of these mortgages
– the attempt to remove responsibility for the actions of sellers and
buyers.
The new millennia brought with it a new way of looking at mortgages.
Previously mortgages were loans that allowed individuals to purchase
something of great importance to them (a house) that was way beyond
their ability to afford. If the mortgage were not repaid, the
lender would have the house to sell and the house was worth more than
the mortgage. The home owner looked forward to paying off the
mortgage and owning her home free and clear, debt free, worry free.
Home owners treasured their homes and lenders were secure in helping
them acquire their homes. Borrower and lender knew one another and
their relationship was often long–term. That was the old way of
looking at mortgages.

The
new way of looking at mortgages is different. A home is a source
of cash, like a piggy bank, and the money in the piggy bank can be used
to buy things that are not precious, such as televisions, automobiles,
and clothes. Every month (mortgage payment) money is put into the
piggy bank and if none is taken out, it goes to waste. Sometimes
the money that is taken out is spent well (such as buying education for
children) but often it is not. Eventually all the money in the
piggy bank is gone but the monthly mortgage payment is still required.
All is the same as before except that the piggy bank and everything in
it (nothing) is now owned by a lender. Paying off the mortgage and
owning the home free and clear, debt free, worry free, is not
intelligent (and usually impossible).
In between the old understanding of a mortgage and the new a brilliant,
different, and highly destructive way to make money was created.
In the old way of looking at mortgages, lenders obtained a kind of
ownership directly in the home that their money allowed the borrower to
buy. The borrower was responsible directly to the lender and the
lender was responsible directly to the borrower. This limited the
number of people who could make money on each loan (the lender).
Here was the brilliant idea that emerged: if hundreds of mortgages were
purchased from original lenders and put into a pool, that pool could be
sliced up and a kind of ownership in each slice could be purchased by
many people (investors). The pool is refreshed each month as
hundreds of people make mortgage payments on their homes but investors
do not own an interest directly in any particular home. They own
an interest in a slice of the pool of mortgages. This is the realm
of mortgage backed securities.
It is also where responsibility disappears. The borrower does not
know who receives her monthly payments (it’s not the banker who
originally made the loan – he sold it long ago) and she doesn’t know
who or how many investors own a slice of the pool that contains her –
or part of her – mortgage). The lender does not know who pays
the money that comes into his slice of the pool (and different slices
have different values and ratings). The relationship between
borrower and lender no longer exists. This is the beginning.
At this point, yet another new, brilliant, and even more destructive way
to make money was created. Pools of mortgaged backed securities
could be gathered into a pool of pools and slices of the super pool
could be sold to yet more investors. Now even more people could
make money from the original mortgage. No trace of responsibility
now exists between the original borrower and investor. This is the
realm of collateralized debt obligations.
One more thing is important. Investors who buy these
“securities” (they are not secure) are not always individuals.
They are frequently money managers who invest for thousands, or
sometimes millions of “small” investors in their funds. People
with money in these funds (like most retirement funds) are owners of a
very tiny slice (shares in their fund) of a slice of a pool of pools
(collateral debt obligation) or a slice of a pool of mortgages (mortgage
backed security).
So much money was made by everyone in this structure that some very
large banks (such as Citigroup) bought a lot of pools, slices and slices
of slices and, like everyone else, found themselves owning
“securities” that weren’t worth much, or anything. When
investors (the same investors, individual and institutional) realized
that, they stopped investing in those banks, too. The value of
Citigroup, for example, fell almost
ninety per cent!
Why so much money was made by so many people before all of them lost so
much is another part of the story, and a very important part. The
point of this part of the story has to do with responsibility. The
step by step deconstruction of responsibility resulted from an old and
familiar understanding of power as the ability to manipulate and
control. This understanding of power is now counterproductive to
our evolution. It produces only violence and destruction.
The amount of destruction that it can produce is visible in Iraq, the
global recession, and every power struggle between individuals and
between collectives.
The new understanding of power is so different from the old, so
startling, transformational, and novel that at first it appears
inadequate to be able to affect, much less repair, the deconstruction of
responsibility that lies at the foundation of perhaps the worst
financial catastrophe in history. Not only is the new
understanding able to repair this institutionalized deconstruction of
responsibility, it is the only thing that can. The new
understanding of power is the alignment of the personality with the
soul, the ability to choose consciously, wisely, and assume
responsibility for the consequences of each choice.
The gap between the new understanding of power and the old is as huge as
the chasm between love and fear, between the economy of scarcity (supply
and demand) and an economy of abundance. The global recession that
escalated out of control in 2008 is not a cyclic return to economic
contraction that will be followed in turn by another economic expansion,
although that may happen. It is a birthing pain of a new economy
and new social structures that will accompany it.
Far beneath the vast political and economic consequences of a very
conservative administration stumbling toward the nationalization of
American banks, the implosion of the American consumer society, and the
spreading of “toxic” investments around the globe lays a change in
human consciousness and evolution unlike any before it. Like a
tectonic plate in motion, everything above it is affected irrevocably.
That change is toward responsibility, not away from it; toward sharing
and away from hoarding; toward cooperation and away from competition;
toward harmony and away from discord; toward contribution and away from
exploitation.

Reconstruction
of responsibility in economic and financial endeavors will follow
deconstruction but the story is much larger than that. Both are
symbolic of a species–wide change in human consciousness that is
dramatically changing individual and collective experiences in
challenging and profoundly positive ways and will continue to do so
throughout our lives.