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| Wall Street traders are bundling bets against the lives of the elderly and the sick (Avi Paz) |
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With the home mortgage crisis dragging along, consumer borrowing
still lagging, and crises looming in other sectors like commercial real
estate, Wall Street is desperate for a new product to kick-start
securities markets.
It appears as though the savior may be riding in on a pale horse.
According to a September 5 New York Times article, banks like
Credit Suisse and Goldman Sachs are exploring new investment schemes
that involve buying up life insurance policies from sick and elderly
people, bundling them into huge securities, and selling shares in the
securities to investors.
Buying shares is essentially a bet--that the people whose insurance
policies on which the securities are based will die "on time" or
earlier than expected. According to the Times, "The earlier the
policyholder dies, the bigger the return--though if people live longer
than expected, investors could get poor returns or even lose money."
Just when it seemed impossible for Wall Street--still counting the
trillions in taxpayer dollars it received in a government bailout to
save it from collapse--to sink any lower, greed came to the rescue with
the development of a grim new market.
As Karl Marx and Frederick Engels wrote in the Communist Manifesto,
"The need of a constantly expanding market for its products chases the
bourgeoisie over the whole surface of the globe. It must nestle
everywhere, settle everywhere, establish connections everywhere."
Now, the financial crisis has driven capitalists to the nursing and retirement homes, and to the bedsides of the sick and dying.
The credit rating agency DBRS--whose Senior Vice President Kathleen
Tillwitz informed the Times that "our phones have been ringing off the
hook with inquiries"--is studying how to rate pools of life insurance
policies. The main challenge is figuring out how to pool people
together. As the Times wrote:
The solution? A bond made up of life settlements would ideally have
policies from people with a range of diseases--leukemia, lung cancer,
heart disease, breast cancer, diabetes, Alzheimer's. That is because if
too many people with leukemia are in the securitization portfolio, and
a cure is developed, the value of the bond would plummet.
If the sub-prime mortgage market boom is any indication, an
increased demand for existing life insurance policies spurred by
increased securitization would lead to widespread abuse and fraud--with
insurers faced with the same incentives that encouraged mortgage
brokers to deceive borrowers with "teaser" interest rates that
ballooned several years into repayment.
In this case, the victims would be the elderly, the sick, and those
who depend on life insurance benefit payouts in the case of the death
of a loved one.
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A FURTHER element of instability would be added if life
insurance-backed securities take off--the likely proliferation of
illegal "stranger-owned life insurance" or "STOLI" policies.
A STOLI is a policy created when a broker or investor convinces
someone, usually a senior citizen, to take out a life insurance policy,
with the promise to sell it quickly for a one-time payment. According
to Reuters, "The death benefits are immediately transferred to
investors, usually hedge funds."
The securitization of life insurance policies would likely lead to
an increase in the number of illegal STOLIs, especially once insurers
exhaust the possibilities of selling ordinary policies. In turn,
insurance companies would have an incentive to crack down on this
practice to avoid paying death benefits to the investors, leaving the
market prone to crisis.
Other challenges for a credit rating agency like DBRS include
figuring out what "would happen if health reform passed, for example,
and better care for a large number of Americans meant that people
generally started living longer? Or if a magic-bullet cure for all
types of cancer was developed?" These eventualities, while prolonging
and improving the lives of millions, would be bad for investors' bottom
line.
The "potential risk for investors," the Times continued, is
that "some people could live far longer than expected. It is not just a
hypothetical risk. That is what happened in the 1980s, when new
treatments prolonged the life of AIDS patients. Investors who bought
their policies on the expectation that the most victims would die
within two years ended up losing money."
According to an ABC News story:
The industry for selling life insurance [policies to investors] first
sprang up during the AIDS epidemic of the late 1980s. "Companies loved
AIDS because it was a predictable death sentence," says Gloria Wolk, a
life-settlement expert who learned about the practice while
volunteering at AIDS services clinics. The shorter and more certain the
life expectancy, the higher the returns promised to investors and the
greater the lump sum offered to patients. It was a grim mix of
free-market capitalism and human mortality.
Wolk nevertheless said she "saw the industry make a huge difference
in the lives of terminally ill patients and their families"--by
providing victims with funds to pay for the exorbitant health care and
other costs associated with dying from AIDS, while it was ignored a
government run by Ronald Reagan.
The only conceivable defense of the practice of bundling life
insurance policies into securities and selling them to investors to
profit from the deaths of policyholders is that it enables those who
sell their policies to get more than they would if they simply sold
policies back to the insurance company.
But this option is only attractive because health care costs in the
U.S. place quality care out of reach--for the nearly 50 million people
without health insurance, and for tens of millions more who are
insured, but can't afford the co-pays and deductibles that pile up when
they get sick or injured.
Similarly, for the elderly whose retirement savings have been eroded
by the current crisis, the inadequacy of Social Security, and by the
long-term shift defined-benefit pension plans to 401(k)s based on the
stock market, the main reason most would be tempted to sell their life
insurance policies is that our government neglects to provide a decent
standard of living for elderly workers who have outlived their
usefulness to the exploiting class.
In other words, the market for securities backed by life insurance
policies depends on the absence of universal single-payer health care
for all and the lack of a sufficient social safety net for senior
citizens.
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ALMOST AS disturbing as first-tier financial institutions betting on death is the matter-of-fact reporting of the New York Times.
The Times article, titled "Wall Street Pursues Profit in
Bundles of Life Insurance," ignores completely the question of the
morality of human beings gambling on the lives of others, indexing the
sick based on the nature of their affliction and when it is likely to
kill them, and crossing their fingers that no cure for cancer is
discovered. This is a brilliant illustration of Marx's assertion that
capitalism "has left no other bond between [people] than naked
self-interest, than callous "cash payment.""
It says a lot about capitalist society's brutality and indifference
to human life that the newspaper of record could cover this story
without pause, going no deeper than the pros and cons from the
perspective of investors--while "Ads by Google" accompany the story,
inviting readers to "sell your life insurance policy" and "find low
cost life insurance."
Nor does the Times question the logic of devoting massive
wealth to a market that creates no new value in the form of goods or
services, and is of no use to anyone but the few who will profit from
it.
According to the Times article, there are $26 trillion in
life insurance policies in the U.S, and "some in the industry predict
the market [for life-insurance-backed securities] could reach $500
billion." That sum is nearly three times the total of all the budget shortfalls of every state government for fiscal year 2010.
A just society based on human need would use that $500 billion to
preserve and expand essential services that are on the chopping block
as states balance their budgets.
A just society based on human need would devote those resources not
to betting on death, but providing top quality care to the sick,
researching new cures and treatments (and making them available to
all), and ensuring that the elderly live the last years of their lives
in dignity and security.
According to the economic "experts," the U.S. economy is beginning
to "recover." But the very nature of the recovery--a return to big
bonuses and salaries for Wall Street executives alongside deepening and
sustained unemployment, cuts in social services and health care
"reform" that amounts to a massive government handout to the health
insurance industry--demolishes any idea that the U.S. is not a class
society.
It is time to build the socialist alternative. Our lives and dignity depend on it.
Socialist Worker