NEW YORK--Americans are angry at Wall Street, and rightly so. First, the financial industry plunged us into economic crisis, then it was bailed out at taxpayer expense, and, now, with the economy still deeply depressed, the industry is paying itself gigantic bonuses.
If you arent outraged, you havent been paying attention.
But crashing the economy and fleecing the taxpayer arent Wall Streets only sins.
Even before the crisis and the bailouts, many financial-industry high-fliers made fortunes through activities that were worthless if not destructive from a social point of view.
And theyre still at it.
Consider two recent news stories.
One involves the rise of high-speed training: some institutions, including Goldman Sachs, have been using superfast computers to get the jump on other investors, buying or selling stocks a tiny fraction of a second before anyone else can react. Profits from high-frequency trading are one reason Goldman is earning record profits and likely to pay record bonuses.
On a seemingly different front, Sundays New York Times reported on the case of Andrew J. Hall, who leads an arm of Citigroup that speculates on oil and other commodities. His operation has made a lot of money recently, and according to his contract, Mr. Hall is owed $100 million.
What do these stories have in common?
The politically salient answer, for now at least, is that in both cases were looking at huge payouts by firms that were major recipients of federal aid.
Citi has received around $45 billion from taxpayers; Goldman has repaid the $10 billion it received in direct aid, but it has benefited enormously both from federal guarantees and from bailouts of other financial institutions. What are taxpayers supposed to think when these welfare cases cut nine-figure paychecks?
But suppose we grant that both Goldman and Mr. Hall are very good at what they do, and might have earned huge profits even without all that aid.
Even so, what they do is bad for America.
Just to be clear: financial speculation can serve a useful purpose.
Its good, for example, that futures markets provide an incentive to stockpile heating oil before the weather gets cold and stockpile gasoline ahead of the summer driving season.
But speculation based on information not available to the public at large is a very different matter.
As the University of California at Los Angeles economist Jack Hirshleifer showed back in 1971, such speculation often combines private profitability with social uselessness.
Its hard to imagine a better illustration than high-frequency trading. The stock market is supposed to allocate capital to its most productive uses, for example by helping companies with good ideas raise money.
But its hard to see how traders who place their orders one-thirtieth of a second faster than anyone else do anything to improve that social function.
What about Mr. Hall?
The New York Times report suggests that he makes money mainly by outsmarting other investors, rather than by directing resources to where theyre needed.
Again, its hard to see the social value of what he does, and theres a good case that such activities are actually harmful.
For example, high-frequency trading probably degrades the stock markets function, because its a kind of tax on investors who lack access to those superfast computers--which means that the money Goldman spends on those computers has a negative effect on national wealth.
As the great University of Stanford economist Kenneth Arrow put it in 1973, speculation based on private information imposes a double social loss: it uses up resources and undermines markets.
Now, you might be tempted to dismiss destructive speculation as a minor issue--and 30 years ago you would have been right. Since then, however, high finance--securities and commodity trading, as opposed to run-of-the-mill banking--has become a vastly more important part of our economy, increasing its share of gross domestic production by a factor of six, and soaring incomes in the financial industry have played a large role in sharply rising income inequality.
What should be done?
Last week the House of Representatives passed a bill setting rules for pay packages at a wide range of financial institutions.
That would be a step in the right direction, but it really should be accompanied by much broader regulation of financial practices--and, I would argue, by higher tax rates on supersized incomes.
Unfortunately, the House measure is opposed by the Obama administration, which still seems to operate on the principle that whats good for Wall Street is good for America.
Neither the administration, nor our political system, in general, is ready to face up to the fact that weve become a society in which the big bucks go to bad actors, a society that lavishly rewards those who make us poorer.