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Fannie, Freddie and the Threat of Economic Meltdown

By Paul Krugman, The New York Times. Posted July 15, 2008.


Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are in the headlines, with dire warnings of imminent collapse. How worried should we be?
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And now we've reached the next stage of our seemingly never-ending financial crisis. This time Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are in the headlines, with dire warnings of imminent collapse. How worried should we be?

Well, I'm going to take a contrarian position: the storm over these particular lenders is overblown. Fannie and Freddie probably will need a government rescue. But since it's already clear that that rescue will take place, their problems won't take down the economy.

Furthermore, while Fannie and Freddie are problematic institutions, they aren't responsible for the mess we're in.

Here's the background: Fannie Mae -- the Federal National Mortgage Association -- was created in the 1930s to facilitate homeownership by buying mortgages from banks, freeing up cash that could be used to make new loans. Fannie and Freddie Mac, which does pretty much the same thing, now finance most of the home loans being made in America.

The case against Fannie and Freddie begins with their peculiar status: although they're private companies with stockholders and profits, they're "government-sponsored enterprises" established by federal law, which means that they receive special privileges.

The most important of these privileges is implicit: it's the belief of investors that if Fannie and Freddie are threatened with failure, the federal government will come to their rescue.

This implicit guarantee means that profits are privatized but losses are socialized. If Fannie and Freddie do well, their stockholders reap the benefits, but if things go badly, Washington picks up the tab. Heads they win, tails we lose.

Such one-way bets can encourage the taking of bad risks, because the downside is someone else's problem. The classic example of how this can happen is the savings-and-loan crisis of the 1980s: S.& L. owners offered high interest rates to attract lots of federally insured deposits, then essentially gambled with the money. When many of their bets went bad, the feds ended up holding the bag. The eventual cleanup cost taxpayers more than $100 billion.

But here's the thing: Fannie and Freddie had nothing to do with the explosion of high-risk lending a few years ago, an explosion that dwarfed the S.& L. fiasco. In fact, Fannie and Freddie, after growing rapidly in the 1990s, largely faded from the scene during the height of the housing bubble.

Partly that's because regulators, responding to accounting scandals at the companies, placed temporary restraints on both Fannie and Freddie that curtailed their lending just as housing prices were really taking off. Also, they didn't do any subprime lending, because they can't: the definition of a subprime loan is precisely a loan that doesn't meet the requirement, imposed by law, that Fannie and Freddie buy only mortgages issued to borrowers who made substantial down payments and carefully documented their income.

So whatever bad incentives the implicit federal guarantee creates have been offset by the fact that Fannie and Freddie were and are tightly regulated with regard to the risks they can take. You could say that the Fannie-Freddie experience shows that regulation works.

In that case, however, how did they end up in trouble?

Part of the answer is the sheer scale of the housing bubble, and the size of the price declines taking place now that the bubble has burst. In Los Angeles, Miami and other places, anyone who borrowed to buy a house at the peak of the market probably has negative equity at this point, even if he or she originally put 20 percent down. The result is a rising rate of delinquency even on loans that meet Fannie-Freddie guidelines.

Also, Fannie and Freddie, while tightly regulated in terms of their lending, haven't been required to put up enough capital -- that is, money raised by selling stock rather than borrowing. This means that even a small decline in the value of their assets can leave them underwater, owing more than they own.

And yes, there is a real political scandal here: there have been repeated warnings that Fannie's and Freddie's thin capitalization posed risks to taxpayers, but the companies' management bought off the political process, systematically hiring influential figures from both parties. While they were ugly, however, Fannie's and Freddie's political machinations didn't play a significant role in causing our current problems.

Still, isn't it shocking that taxpayers may end up having to rescue these institutions? Not really. We're going through a major financial crisis -- and such crises almost always end with some kind of taxpayer bailout for the banking system.

And let's be clear: Fannie and Freddie can't be allowed to fail. With the collapse of subprime lending, they're now more central than ever to the housing market, and the economy as a whole.

© 2008 The New York Times

AlterNet is making this New York Times material available in accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107: This article is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.

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View:
6,000 plus to go down
Posted by: Bobsays on Jul 15, 2008 12:36 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The FDIC believes over 6,000 will go down in the next few months. The US is facing the biggest banking collapses since the Great Depression. In fact, it is going to be on the same scale.

I would get your money into Swiss currency and hedge with gold and silver. Why? Because waiting for the FDIC to pay back your money will take ages and in the process you will go broke trying to borrow money to live. Also, bail-outs will destroy the value of the US dollar.

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» RE: You're insane Posted by: Jasonix
Time to Fire the Federal Reserve ...
Posted by: mmckinl on Jul 15, 2008 12:53 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The privately owned and operated Federal Reserve is a corporation whose shares are owned, not by the public, but by the member banks. The myth is that the President picks board members when in reality the President picks replacements from a list preapproved by the bankers themselves. As we know a corporation serves only one master, its owners and the Fed's owners are not the public but the banks themselves.

The Fed is just about entirely responsible for the current financial mess we are in for two reasons. The first is that they refused or declined to carry out their mandate to regulate and supervise the banks. The Second is their low interest rate policies while great for their members profits set the stage for the abuse of home mortgages.

What advantage would a Public Central Bank have?

First - ask yourself this question: Why are we paying interest to create our own money? We, as a country have the right under law to print our own money, why borrow it from the privately owned and operated Federal Reserve and pay interest on it.!

Second - why should private banks have a monopoly on the creation of money and then leverage their holdings to lend 10 times, at interest, what they actually have in deposits?

Third - why should banks get to decide how the money is lent, that is, who and what the loans they make actually benefit. Are the loans made for the Common Good or just given to those who will pay the most to get them.

Fourth - Having a Public Central Bank would allow the interest rate to float rather than be set ( too low ) with the discount rate for the profit of the private banks.

Fifth - By having money that isn't created out of leveraged debt when a dowturn does happen bad loans will not take down the whole system by crashing the credit supply.

Sixth - the creation of money is very profitable. Why should the private banks have that privilege when the law clearly states that it is the responsibility of government to create money?

We need a Public Central Bank. The rights, responsibilities and ownership of money creation by law rests in the hands of the people through their government.

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» See: "The Money Masters"... Posted by: JoAnne
Why do people say Fannie and Freddie must be rescued by the people?
Posted by: aouie01 on Jul 15, 2008 12:58 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I do understand there is a fear of a chain reaction into financial chaos if people and / or businesses lose faith in the economy. But, does that have to translate to the people donating money to private businesses? With the banks it was part of a pre-existing understanding that the people (through the government) would back all private accounts upto $100K (with some variations and exceptions), and so when banks fail, the people live up to the earlier understanding and pick up the tab up to the federally insured amount. If Fannie and Freddie's loans were not federally backed, then I would rather the people not have to pick up the tab.

If there are any other reasons, other than the fear of financial chaos (including worsening housing crisis, etc.) to consider rescuing the private company, then do share the information.
Sincerely,
Aouie

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» Take them over! Posted by: chorton
» All We Need To Do Is.. Posted by: ranchero42
History Lesson
Posted by: Urgelt on Jul 15, 2008 3:45 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let's look back in time for a moment.

Fannie and Freddie were part of the New Deal response to the Great Depression.

During the Depression, credit was impossibly tight. Nobody loaned money to home-buyers because of fear of default in the rotten economic situation gripping the nation.

By creating Fannie and Freddie, investors gained enough confidence to make loans, and we slowly dug our way out of the Depression.

Fannie and Freddie are success stories, then. But once the credit crisis they were designed to solve was over, we didn't shut them down and let the market take over.

That was a mistake.

Transferring risk from lenders to taxpayers during a housing boom just puts upward pressure on home prices. It makes booms worse, and it worsens the following collapse, too.

Bailing them out will no doubt rescue our financial sector. But it will also keep upward pressure on home prices. Expensive homes are good for builders and bankers, but not so good for ordinary people. And as Mr. Krugman says, it socializes investor risk and privatizes profit. To a progressive, that's seriously Bass-Akwards.

As Roosevelt envisioned it, the time we need a Fannie or Freddie is during a credit crunch. The rest of the time, we should put them on ice. That will remove one of the factors which is propelling these boom-bust cycles which are so damaging to the economy and so damned expensive to taxpayers.

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» RE: History Lesson Posted by: whoopingcrone
Federal Reserve truly is a private, central bank.
Posted by: ATH on Jul 15, 2008 3:49 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The FED does indeed need to be phased-out. It is also the reason for the extreme imbalance
in wealth, with 1% of the population "making" more money than the other 99% earn.
This is what Thomas Jefferson had to say about letting private banks control the issuance of our currency..when I read it, it sent chills through my spine. Our Founders were so smart..why don't we follow their advice, which also happens to be the Constitution--which is supposed to be the supreme law of the land. The Federal Reserve Act was sold to the American people, and members of Congress (those who weren't bribed)as a solution to "the consolidation of wealth into the hands of the few." But it was these very same "hands of the few"--J.P.Morgan, Paul Warburg, and John D. Rockefeller who, in absolute secrecy, created the FED. They did it in absolute secrecy because if the people found out who was behind it, they would have seen it for the fraud it was. President Woodrow Wilson, who signed the Bill into Law, later deeply regretted his actions. Here is Thomas Jeferson: "If the American people ever allow the banks to control the issuance of their currency...the banks and corporations that will grow up around them, will deprive the people of all property, until their children wake up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered."
And this is what President Woodrow Wilson had to say about his regret of signing the FED into law in 1913--and without the neccesary Constitutional amendment: "I am a most unhappy man. I have unwittingly destroyed my country. A great industrial nation is now dependent on its system of credit.
We are no longer a government by free opinion, no longer a government by conviction and the vote of the majority, but a government by the opinion and duress of a small group of dominant men"--President W. Wilson, 1919.
Finally, a word from Abraham Lincoln:
"The government should create, issue, and circulate all the currency. Creating and issuing money is the supreme prerogative of government, and its greatest creative opportunity.
Adopting these principles will save the taxpayers immense sums of interest, and money will cease to be the master and become the servant of humanity."--Abraham Lincoln.
For a more in-depth analysis of the FED, I highly recommend Aaron Russo's movie, "America: From Freedom to Fascism," which you can watch for free on google video. Just go to the website, America Freedom to fascism, and there will be a link about mid-page to the movie. That is from where I pulled most of these quotes.
I'll end with one more from Thomas Jeferson:
"I sincerely believe the banking institutions, having the issuing power of money, are more dangerous to liberty than standing armies."

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OK, Paul, There's A Crisis Alright. It's One That You Repeatedly Ignore.
Posted by: gazooks on Jul 15, 2008 4:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What underlies this financial environment of excess and imbalance? Why is it unacknowledged and unspoken by those who know but fear for their careers if a public dialog is engaged? Why have the "best and brightest" economic, mainstream journalists refused to address the elephant in the room?

And, how deep will the resulting DEPRESSION be as the result of irresponsible and callous disregard of the truth about the politically driven, systemic abuse of the corruptible nature of what we've been sold as money?

The "legal tender", Federal Reserve Note in which we've most unfortunately trusted and in which we "value" our material world and services rendered, is the "Great Hoax" underlying our financial undoing.

There has never been a more fundamentally misleading and democratically destructive instrument employed against the interests of the 90% foundation of our population. It's been nearly 100 years of slow motion grandest of theft that's accelerated to a now very much perceptual, and soon to be catastrophic rate of erosion of value.

It's an inherent and irreversible trend that left unexamined and understood by the public at large, will result in social dissolution, political upheaval and the end of any semblance of democracy.

It's a fatal fraud to freedom and you say nothing. It's intellectual cowardice of the worst kind, an abdication to a future of totalitarianism, and you know it.

You're well recognized as a voice of liberal economics, it's past time for you to acknowledge it's limits, it's flaws and the dire fate of our country if left to "authority" to correct.

Your professional and our collective legacy is at stake and it's time to act.

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» Please try to make a coherent case. Posted by: KeepsonTickn
» RE: The elephant is Iraq Posted by: Mamarianne
Things will come to a head sooner than we think!
Posted by: Krain61 on Jul 15, 2008 5:12 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Government bails this and that out and we pay for it and how long can this go on?
Not 4ever I'm sure of it!
The Government owes what! about 10 trillion .
Sooner or later and I fear it will be sooner things will come to a head.
Were raped at the pump.
At the Store for Food.
people are loosing there homes.
There Jobs have been given away and these companies got taxs breaks to give up a good tax base..
Yea the time is much nearer than people know.
We sell off our water and I can only wonder what will be next! There forcing people back to cities to work which will make it much easier to control us when things finally do come to a head.

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» It's happening now, so... Posted by: Last Chance
Something is wrong here but what it is, is just not clear
Posted by: solrev on Jul 15, 2008 5:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As a public company F&F could buy paper from banks that qualified based on regulated loan standards. This sounds like a great idea to me. In fact why are they named F&F in place of FR? As a private company how much subprime paper are they holding? How much mortgage paper have they bundled and sold? Is there anyway to tell the difference? It seems to me that this bail out is a publicity stunt. The bail out that should happen is the FR buys all the stock while it is worthless and returns F&F to the public regulated sector. This would force private banks to meet regulated loan standards or take on their own risk. Banks could sell their good long term paper to F&F or not. Any creative money making schemes could only be sold to investors and its buy at your own risk. Now the FR loans the private bank money at 2%, the bank loans it to me at 5%. The bank sells it back to the FR at 5% and pockets the points. A 100 loan at one point at 5% interest.
FR prints 102
Me long term 100-1-105 = -6
Bank –102+1+105 = 4
FR 102–105+105 = 102
Free market capitalism –6+4 = -2
2 point growth long term and every body is happy, talk about living on a bubble.

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Ahhhh The 80's.....
Posted by: BlammDaddy on Jul 15, 2008 5:36 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hmmm Savings and loan crisis ?
I seem to recall an outfit that was run by a crime family called: Silverado Savings and Loan ???
Anyone remember that ???
Oh. That's right you were to busy watching Michael ( or Michelle?) Jackson change colors.
That outfit was run by none other than Neil Bush....the same on in charge of security at the twin towers when the "terra atak" happened.
So.
Answer me a question. Are you dumb sumbitches going to vote for little Jeb when he runs for office ?
Probably....as long as he has his bible and promises not to " murder" babies.
You can thank your uneducated, flag waving. bible toting dupes for your demise. I see the media pushing for McPain for the continuation of Bush/Cheney 3.
I spose you could run across the border to Mexico to gain a better quality of life if that should happen.
Idiots.

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» RE: Ahhhh The 80's..... Posted by: makeadifference
» RE: Ahhhh The 80's..... Posted by: farmer's daughter
The pain is coming regardless- the questions are when, and how much...
Posted by: Farasien on Jul 15, 2008 5:39 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I personally feel that fannie and freddie ought to be allowed to go belly up. As it is, all the financial gurus out there are dancing around the word 'depression', trying not to be the one to openly say it in order to keep the public from panicking. The reality is simple- the US economy is DOA. The banks are already in full failure- its only through funny accounting and game-playing with reporting that they still LOOK, but aren't in FACT, solvent. The dollar is DOA- there was a recent auction for government treasury bonds and NOBODY WANTED THEM. This means international investors smell the blood and won't sacrifice themselves because they know what's coming. The credit issue is cutting banks off from each other, which makes the entire banking sector (in case you didn't already know) even more at risk due to a lack of flexibility. Since banks don't trust each other with overnight loans as they once did, any small bank failure starts a chain reaction that spreads like wildfire. This is in spite of the FED's (and other international central banks) recent riads of our treasury funds, to the tune of a few hundreds of billions, that were given as 'liquidity injections' to try and jump start the financial system again. Interest rates are being held artificially low, and when the stops come off- and its going to happen very soon- we will have the government of Zimbabwe right here in the formerly good 'ol US of A.

In short people, the dollar is dead, the debt holders won't give us any more money. Nobody wants to buy any more of it because the US economy has become the equivalent of a junk bond. Our major banks are failing- including the 2 that underwrite the VAST majority of our 'good' mortgages in this country- one of the main pillars of our rapidly dying economy. Due to our not having an industrial base to speak of (made in China!) we can't go isolationist and tell the world to go fuck itself. The banks can't and won't loan- to us or to each other, and the FED is powerless to stop ANY of it. The people whose job it is to tell us how deep the hole is are outright lying to keep from going to jail (or worse) and the seeds of hyperinflation are beginning to sprout. If we don't have a major event occur in the next few years (*cough* false flag attack *cough*), the USA's economy will publicly collapse completely, and tht means we all go back to the stone age in all but name.

Get self-sufficient, get out of debt and stock up on durable food and supplies NOW. Reallocate what may remain of your savings by getting it out of US banks... NOW. Brush off the survivalist manuals and get ready, because, economically speaking, the end is near.

...Not that anyone will listen, of course. History is so BOOOOOOORING, after all...

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» RE: What if Posted by: solrev
» RE: What if Posted by: Last Chance
Bush squandered
Posted by: Last Chance on Jul 15, 2008 5:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
billions on his conquest of Iraq, borrowing much of those billions from foreign banks, so the Fed is trillions in debt. All those banks need is to refuse to lend any more money and the whole corrupted structure will come tumbling down. It only required a nudge from organized corporate criminals in sub prime real estate, and POOF, the illusion of wealth vanishes and everyone is thrown back into the real World, like will your garden grow enough to feed you?

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» RE: A magical mystery tour Posted by: solrev
» RE: A magical mystery tour Posted by: Last Chance
» RE: Bush squandered all his life Posted by: Cybershaman
It'll just cost us another trillion
Posted by: PaulK on Jul 15, 2008 6:39 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This crisis isn't exactly the Iraq occupation.

Problem is, we're broke. The occupations spent our money. The crooks spent our money. The money is close to gone. The neocons have succeeded in drowning Uncle Sam in a bathtub.

If you have a savings account, good. However, your dollar is worth a dime. That's what happens in countries that spend 10 times what they have. It recently happened in Argentina. It happened in Britain in the 1930s. It really happened in Germany in the 1920s because of war reparations.

In addition, our environment is somewhat spent. It's full of toxins and we're getting cancer. Some of our good cropland is being spent, washed down the Mississippi. Our bridges and roads are spent down. Our veterans have been spent like a credit card, and they're coming past due.

If you're part of a nonprofit, tell them to pull in the pursestrings now or disappear soon.

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» It may cost global ecocide, so Posted by: Last Chance
It's the Economy, Stupid
Posted by: sre on Jul 15, 2008 7:01 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Most people in this country are so stupid that they drool on the steering wheel of the SUV that they drive to work every day. So since they're dumb enough not to notice that there's a crisis, does one really exist? As the old philosophical aphorism states: "If a tree falls in the forest and no one hears, does it make a sound?"

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» It's Nature, dummy! Posted by: Last Chance
more description than explanation
Posted by: ghost in the machine on Jul 15, 2008 7:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Interesting article but not really an explanation .What is happening niow has been predictable for many years . , and seemingly its the economists who 'dont get it ' ....until it happens . This is because classical economics can t explain this phenomena in any predictive way. partly because ideologically such economists are not emploiyed as 'truth seekers 'nor as 'party poopers '. They only get in on the cat when as it befalls they can make a claim of 'I saww it first '.
In essence this is the logical out come of the free market. Where competition and deregulation mean at some point a point of 'diminshed return is reached ' .This came out very clearly with the Enron fiasco , where 'costs 'were moved on to the profit margin to disguise the reality of loss.

No Obama or Mc cann will fix this one , it is the insoluble contradiction within capital playing itself out .What they will do for sure is put it on the backs of the world working class and the environment .However this could also be a point of revolutionary change . But are we up to it ,and can we catch the moment before the door closes .I dont know ,and sadly I think certainly over in the UK , fascism may yet win the day.

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IS “CAPITALISM” COLLAPSING – IF SO WHO RULES?
Posted by: michaelo on Jul 15, 2008 7:13 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
IS “CAPITALISM” COLLAPSING – IF SO WHO RULES?
By Michael O’McCarthy

Or is it Socialism for the Rich having a crisis of “greed breakdown.” The managers of the US corporate controlled state is rushing once again to do as they have been paid to do: Politicians bailing out greed-ridden elitists who manage the giant corporations of finance. The Republicans and Democrats are now doing for finance, (banks and home mortgage lenders as they have done production, as with Chrysler – one of the heads on the trillion dollar automobile – rubber – petroleum – highway – hospitality – transportation – highway construction – urban planning – a mega-headed serpent corporate combine.) The reality is that this is a statist government under the control of and for the benefit of the rich.

The cowboys of oil (Bush and Cheney) are but puppet-like caricatures of the greed driven CEO class of managers who now comprise a new elite class of rulers in the US with an international familia. They are to economics as Bush is to international relations. They perceive an end result predicated upon their own narrow interests with everyone else taking or getting what is left. That it leaves the world unstable, or in ruins is part of being “in the game.”

Now in the United States, the pain, horror and guilt, (as in being “guilty”) of the Iraq war aside, citizens are beginning to pay the hindmost. What was first apparent was the skyrocketing cost of highway – street driving gas costs. Getting to or from work; picking up kids at school; going shopping, all begin to suddenly cost far more than the average citizen can quickly absorb. Lying just beneath the surface however was the next great gouge in the side of Joe and Joan, Juan and Juanita, Shamika and Ahmed, Chou and Lin: the great American dream of a homestead was exploding like a … bubble bath bubble!

What else the Wall Street Boys (and Girls given the likes of Martha) don’t know, no matter how smart they pretend to be, is consequences of their “game.”

Thus, there are three crucial questions:

1- Is this “crisis” just a permutation within what once was a capitalist economic order now taking place in what is more accurately labeled Pseudo Capitalism, (to borrow a term from my friend Steve Bindman’s forth coming book, PSEUDO CAPITALISM – Socialism for the Rich and the Coming Crisis?)
2- And if not – a complete collapse of this mutated form of statist government?
3- And if the latter, who will rule?

PART I

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IS “CAPITALISM” COLLAPSING – IF SO WHO RULES?
Posted by: michaelo on Jul 15, 2008 7:14 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
IS “CAPITALISM” COLLAPSING – IF SO WHO RULES?
By Michael O’McCarthy

PART II

Who will rule? Where is a democratic party with a socially oriented central plan to solve this crisis and to bring about long term planning that will make the economy democratic, the only real solution to the theft of the US government and fraudulent corporations that bought our government? Why aren’t the “progressives” of the Left out in the streets leading the charge for a centrally planned economy in the hands of socially democratically oriented politicians? Its time we stop letting the liberal “progressives” play catch-up with Obama. We are way past bemoaning his pro-imperialist foreign policy; his pro-COINTELPRO attitude towards the nation’s spy apparatus; his pathetic take on the healthcare monopoly.

The demand must now be to take to the floor of the Democratic Party convention with a central planning platform, a demand for a democratic controlled economy, with the rollback of Globalization; the reorganization of Fannie Mae that guarantees equitable loans for equitable real estate costs; extend the national Congressional healthcare system to all that want it; guarantee extended Social Security. A smart defense policy will provide the coffers of the “military defense industrial complex” alone to pay for that. We must demand emergency legislation that raises taxes on anyone earning more than $250,000.00 per year and an equitable tax schedule for corporations; end the “voluntary army”; create a national works Corp; extend unemployment until there is full employment for all who can work; strip away subsidies for “choice” schools and fund full edition through college and technical schools. That’s a start!

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US bailout of mortgage giants: The politics of plutocracy
Posted by: xvictor on Jul 15, 2008 7:41 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The government bailout of the mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac announced Sunday goes well beyond the $29 billion injection of Federal Reserve funds used to subsidize the takeover of Bear Stearns last March by JPMorgan Chase.

It not only demonstrates the depth of the economic crisis of American capitalism, it also provides an object lesson on the real relations of political power and influence behind the façade of American democracy.

Their debacle is the latest and to date most spectacular expression of the decay of American capitalism. It is another refutation of the myths promoted by the US ruling elite about the miraculous workings of the capitalist market—supposedly the pinnacle of human achievement.

At the same time, it exposes the cynicism behind the official mantra of “free enterprise.” When it comes to big capital, losses are socialized. Only profits remain private.

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2008/jul2008/bail-j15.shtml

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It's been coming for quite some time, so it's not really a shocker.
Posted by: symcokid on Jul 15, 2008 7:55 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When people are reliant on Credit Cards to make it from week to week and max them all out, what else can you expect. When this almighty USofA has to borrow money from other countries, that should tell us something. The fact that this land and all it's resouces were stolen and that this Land of the Free, America, kidnapped Blacks from Africa in order to have slave labor and still be bankrupt today certainly has to make gross mismanagement suspect - or should I say abhorrent greed.

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Paper
Posted by: ATH on Jul 15, 2008 8:04 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Wake up, you idiots! Whatever made you think paper was so valuable?"
--Kurt Vonnegut, Galapagos

"We can't be so fixated on our desire to preserve the rights of ordinary Americans."
--President Bill Clinton, March 11, 1993

"The Constitution is just a Godd**n piece of paper!"--President George W. Bush, 5/'05

We have to own up to our own apathy. The signs have been coming for years. We let them get away with beating the heads in of Vietnam protesters; we let them get away with assassinating J.F.K. and Martin Luther King, Jr. I can't name all the things we and Congress have let the madmen cheney and Bush get away with; we let Nancy Pelosi run on a platform saying she and other democrats would end the "war" and hold the Bush adminstration accountable, only to immediately pledge that "impeachment is off the table."
And not one news-paper reports the truth about what has really been going on...
Most Americans can't even name the 3 Branches of our govenment, and believe the President has the power to suspend the Constitution...although I can see why they might think that, since he has acted more like a dicttor than a President, and Congress has given him everything he's wanted. I hope they're not too suprised when he dissolves the House and Senate. After all, when he gets whatever he wants anyway, and ignores any parts of laws he doesn't like with his magical 'signing Statements.' He and his advisors laugh at Congress and their subpeonas!' Maybe if they threw Karl Rove in jail for a few nights, and began immediate impeachment hearings against both Bush and Cheney. The only problem with that, is that Pelosi would become acting President until another is "elected".

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» AMEN Posted by: makeadifference
» RE: Paper Posted by: EncinoM
» RE: Paper Posted by: ATH
» RE: Paper Posted by: EncinoM
This house was your house
Posted by: Jim V. on Jul 15, 2008 8:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
America it saddens me to see you hurting this way because when you hurt your cousin to the north of you hurts as well eventually. We're joined at the hip sort of speaking so please get your house in order, do whatever it takes an honour killing, storm the white house hang your leaders for treason and while your at publically flog anyone associated with banking in the stock market as they've sold you out to the lowest bidder in China, India and Saudi Arabia.
Once you've done that elect Jesse "The Liberal" Ventura as your President as he ironically is making any sense lately.
It saddens me to see a once great nation crumble because of a few yahoos (one has no heart the other no brain)how did you allow this to happen?

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Oh thanks Paul
Posted by: jc1234 on Jul 15, 2008 10:03 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Krugman. Your article has made it all sound simple and A-OK...but then again you haven't had your job outsourced to a third world nation so the New York Times can increase their profits a little bit.

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My solution
Posted by: Jasonix on Jul 15, 2008 10:10 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Rather than us taxpayers bailing out the mortgage giants just so we can continue to pay our mortgages, I have a different idea - declare all mortgages null and void. Everyone's house is now their own, free and clear.

On top of that, we need some new laws:

1. No individual may own more than 1 house.

2. Corporations cannot own houses at all, except to build and sell them. Corporations may not own land.

3. Houses along the coasts and lake shores are limited, with most beach-areas reserved as common land.

4. You may not use debt to finance the purchase of a home. Sellers must sell only for the best price that a person can scrape up.

5. Property taxes are illegal. All taxes must be based on the ability to pay.

The way I see it, this will make decent housing affordable for most people, driving the price of a 1,400-square foot home to something like $25,000 in a decent middle class community. It'll prevent people from trying to get rich through real estate speculation to the detriment of the up-and-coming generation. It'll encourage simpler, more functional homes rather than garish suburban McMansions that are costly to heat. It'll kill the primary way that our financial industry enslaves and terrifies working people. Whatever happens, no one will be in immediate danger of losing their homes. It'll smash one of the biggest tricks the banks have in creating bogus money that doesn't really exist, taming inflation.

The mortgage is one of the most unjust, cruelest institutions in modern history. It seemed to make sense only because no one dared to do the truly brave thing - limiting the amount of real estate that any individual or entity could own.

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» RE: My solution Posted by: EncinoM
» RE: My solution Posted by: Jasonix
» RE: My solution Posted by: EncinoM
» RE: My solution Posted by: LindaB
» RE: My solution Posted by: EncinoM
» RE: My solution Posted by: rickiey
Simple Solution which costs Tax Payers Nothing...
Posted by: TJColatrella on Jul 15, 2008 10:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We could have solved this crisis without spending one dime of Tax Payer money by simply Pegging these Sub Primes at 3% above the Fed Rate and forgiving all penalties to date 1/2 of which or more are illegal as reported anyway..

These not to go below 6.25-6.5% so they are not paying less than others with Prime mortgages..this way the lenders would lose nothing and make some money on these and the borrowers could most of them remain in their housing..which will otherwise bring serious negative downward pressure on the already limited and inflated rental market..

This would also lift our failing dollar all it would have taken is leadership and we have none and none from the candidates either..

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How is this legal?
Posted by: Cap'n Solar on Jul 15, 2008 11:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I see ads all over Alternet- so obviously they are making a profit. How can you reprint something from the NYT and say "AlterNet is making this New York Times material available in accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107: This article is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes."

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» RE: How is this legal? Posted by: EncinoM
There are three reasons
Posted by: willymack on Jul 15, 2008 12:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For the mess we're in: 1. Corruption 2. Corruption 3.Corruption. Any questions?

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Credit card debt is ugly...
Posted by: ranchero42 on Jul 15, 2008 12:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But why did you let it get ugly? It's not about greed, it's about an idea that should have gone by the wayside in the Fifties: Keeping Up With the Joneses. Why has it taken so long for so many to separate NEED from WANT? This is why the big box stores succeed, because we have been sucked into cheap plastic crap mindset.

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» RE: Credit card debt is ugly... Posted by: aussidawg
» Bling Child Posted by: ranchero42
Isn't The NYT SOOO Reassuring!?
Posted by: loxias on Jul 15, 2008 1:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wow... I wonder why? Bolstering consumer confidence with half-truths, huge blandishments, and a total disconnection with history... hmm that type of media propaganda seems familiar... I know I've seen this sort of thing before, just can't put my finger on it. (The NYT has about as much cache at this point as a flyer dropped at midnight from 5,000 feet over Cambodia in 1972...)

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madregal
Posted by: madregal on Jul 15, 2008 1:26 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How much of our current problems are a result of the deregulation policies of the 1980's? Have those policies triggered a dominoe effect resulting in the problems we now face? Was it planned that way? I need to be informed by the answers given here. What do you think?

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BOTH should be NATIONALIZED