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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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side economics and <strong>Bush</strong>'s deregulation had abrogated the business cycle, and that there<br />

never would be any more recessions. This is why the "recession" (in reality the<br />

exacerbation of the pre-existing depression) that <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> was forced to acknowledge<br />

during late 1990 was so ominous in its implications. <strong>The</strong> leveraged buyouts of the 1980's<br />

were now doomed to collapse. <strong>The</strong> handwriting on the wall was clear by September-<br />

October of 1989, the first year of <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>'s presidency, when the $250 billion<br />

market for junk bonds collapsed just in advance of the mini-crash of the New York Stock<br />

Exchange.<br />

All in all, during the years between 1982 and 1988, more than 10,000 merger and<br />

acquisition deals were completed within the borders of the USA, for a total capitlization<br />

of $1 trillion. <strong>The</strong>re were in addition 3500 international mergers and acquisitions for<br />

another $500 billion. [fn 6 ] <strong>The</strong> enforcement of antitrust laws atrophied into nothing: as<br />

one observer said of the late 1980's, "such concentrations had not been allowed since the<br />

early days of antitrust at the beginning of the century."<br />

<strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>'s friend Henry Kravis raised money for his leveraged buyouts from a<br />

number of sources. Money came first of all from insurance companies such as the<br />

Metropolitan Life Insurance Company of New York, which cultivated a close relation<br />

with KKR over a number of years. Met was joined by Prudential, Aetna, and Northwest<br />

Mutual. <strong>The</strong>n there were banks like Manufacturers Hanover Trust and Bankers Trust. All<br />

these institutions were attracted by astronomical rates of return on KKR investments,<br />

estimated at 32.2% in 1980, 41.8% in 1982, 28% in 1984, and 29.6% in 1986. By 1987,<br />

KKR prospectus boasted that they had carried out the first large LBO of a publicly held<br />

company, the first billion-dollar LBO, the first large LBO of a public company via tender<br />

offer, and the largest LBO in history, Beatrice Foods.<br />

<strong>The</strong>n came the state pension funds, who were also anxious to share in these very large<br />

returns. <strong>The</strong> first to begin investing with KKR was Oregon, which shovelled money to<br />

KKR like there was no tomorrow. Other states that joined in were Washington, Utah,<br />

Minnesota, Michigan, New York, Wisconsin, Illinois, Iowa, Massachusetts, and<br />

Montana. <strong>The</strong> decisions to committ funds were typically made by state boards. An<br />

example is Minnesota: here the State Board of Investment is made up of the Governor,<br />

the state Treasurer, the state auditor, the Secretary of State, and the Attorney General,<br />

currently Skip Humphrey. Some of these funds are so heavily committed to KKR that if<br />

any of the highly-leveraged deals should go sour in the current "recession," pensions for<br />

many retired state workers in those states would soon cease to exist. In that eventuality,<br />

which for many working people has already occurred, the victims should remember<br />

<strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>, the political godfather of Henry Kravis and KKR.<br />

KKR had one other very important source of capital for its deals: this was the nowdefunct<br />

Wall Strreet investment firm of Drexel, Burnham, Lambert, and its Californiabased<br />

junk bond king, Michael Milken. Drexel and Milken were the most important<br />

single customers KKR had. (Drexel had its own Harriman link: it had merged with<br />

Harriman Ripley & Co. of New York in 1966.) During the period of close working<br />

alliance between KKR and Drexel, Milken's junk-bond operation raised an estimated $20

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