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The Price of Wall Street's Rescue

By Robert Kuttner, AlterNet. Posted September 19, 2008.


Help must go to the ordinary people who have suffered harm, not just wealthy insiders. That should be the price of a deal.
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Treasury Secretary Paulson and Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke are sending Congress emergency legislation to put the bailout of Wall Street on a more systematic footing. They had little choice, since the Federal Reserve has already used up more than half of its nearly a trillion dollars of cash.

Last week, Paulson played a very high-stakes game of chicken with the rest of Wall Street, when he tried to halt the bailouts by declaring that the private financial community would have to rescue Lehman Brothers. But nobody blinked. And Lehman went under, setting off deeper shock waves. Next they tried the same game with A.I.G. -- then quickly reversed course when they realized that the stakes were too high.

Now, Paulson is playing same chicken game with the Democrats: Accept our plan or risk Great Depression II. Grant us sweeping authority to have taxpayers buy up worthless assets from banks, have the government hold the securities until financial markets return to normal, and then gradually sell them back and see what the government can recover.

But the worst possible result would be for financial markets to return to "normal" -- if normal means the speculative casino of the past decade, abetted by figures like Paulson. The Democrats would be foolish to accept the Paulson plan at face value, since this entire crisis is the result of his view of the economy, which boils down to deregulate-and-bail.

Superficially, the Administration plan bears similarities to ones first floated by Democrats Barney Frank, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, and New York Senator Chuck Schumer. Administration leaks have likened the proposed plan to earlier government rescues -- the Reconstruction Finance Corporation and Home Owners Loan Corporation of the New Deal, which pumped hundreds of billions of public money into the private economy; and the Resolution Trust Corporation of the 1980s, which cleaned up the first savings and loan meltdown (also the child of deregulation.)

But the similarities are only skin deep. In the cases of the Roosevelt institutions, public capital went hand in hand with stringent toughening of public standards. And with the Resolution Trust Corporation, government sorted out good loans from bad, and sold off assets at so many cents on the dollar. But the damage was finite.

Today, the scale of the bad assets on the books of financial institutions dwarfs any previous crisis, and is literally unknowable. For example, insurance against bad debt, underwritten by companies such as A.I.G, totals about $42 trillion dollars alone. That's trillion.

Nobody knows how much of this debt will ultimately be paid back, because that depends on the health of the broader economy and the confidence of investors. Paulson's idea of allowing financial institutions to park questionable securities in a government agency may not be sufficient to stem the damage -- unless it is coupled with broader reforms.

In return for taking a lot of bad paper off the books of financial institutions, we should demand:

  • Much tougher regulation of all financial institutions going forward. That can't be done in a week -- so let's strictly limit the new bailout authority to six months, then have the new administration enact permanent legislation on both systematic recapitalizing of and much tougher regulation.
  • A refinancing of sub-prime mortgages held by homeowners. American households have already lost something like two trillion dollars in home equity, thanks to sub-prime. Why use public money to bail out the wizards of Wall Street who caused the damage, but not the ordinary Americans who suffered it?
  • A second, much larger stimulus package, in the range of $300 billion, to put people back to work rebuilding America's rotting infrastructure, so that money goes to states, cities, towns, and families -- and not just to banks and brokers.

Congressional Republicans are all over the map on the Paulson plan. Some are blasting the bailout; others are in bed with Wall Street. Hardly any are demanding help for Main Street. This is surely an opportunity for progressive Democrats.

Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid, and the rest of Democratic leadership should not be intimidated by this high-stakes game of chicken. Help must go to the hundreds millions of ordinary people who have suffered harm, not just wealthy insiders; and that should be the price of a deal.

And for a couple of years and maybe more, deficit spending is going to have to rise sharply -- there is no other way to recapitalize banks and to prevent a cratering of the wider economy. Despite bipartisan deficit phobia, temporary large deficits are far superior to the alternative -- a second great depression.

But these deficits shouldn't just help Wall Street. If Democrats hang tough on that principle and Republicans resist, it tells voters everything they know about the two parties this election year.

Digg!

See more stories tagged with: government, wall street, finance, regulation, bailout

Robert Kuttner's new book is "Obama's Challenge: America's Economic Crisis and the Power of a Transformative Presidency."

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What we can do
Posted by: CA NOW on Sep 19, 2008 12:45 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We need to call on Congress this week to tell them they must act now! Use this toll-free number: 1-888-245-0215

Tell them: Please do not leave this month without passing an economic recovery package that helps low-income people avoid hardships, helps the jobless, maintains needed public services, and boosts the economy.

You'll be connected to the Capitol Switchboard - please ask to be connected to your Representative and your two Senators.
Look up your Representative's name.
Look up your Senators' names.

Background: The House leadership is expected to bring up a recovery bill soon. Discussions are going on now about what might be in the package. We need your help to press for aid to help low-income people pay for food, heat, and other basic needs, and to make sure that essential public services are maintained. Advocates have been urging more funds for food and home energy assistance, additional weeks of unemployment benefits, more aid to states for rising Medicaid costs and to keep collecting child support owed to millions of children, more funds for Head Start, and more jobs through infrastructure repair and jobs programs for youth. For explanation of these proposals, see Towards Shared Recovery.

Read more on how the economy is affecting women and families.

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Chicken Indeed ... Disaster Capitalism !
Posted by: mmckinl on Sep 19, 2008 1:54 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We need to demand all of what Kuttner proposed and one more change ...

A Public Central Bank that prints our money without interest, that the proceeds of government money creation be recycled to the public with the interest savings and the expansion of the money supply, hundreds of billions if not over a trillion dollars a year !

Indeed, why should we borrow money from the privately owned and operated Federal Reserve when in fact and in deed they enabled and encouraged the very crisis we are in through lax regulation, encouragement of derivatives and interest rates that were held too low for too long.

It is time that We the People benefited from our birthright given us by the Constitution to print our own money, money without interest, money without debt.

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step one
Posted by: le501 on Sep 20, 2008 4:02 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I would suggest that one of the first things that needs to be accomplished is to replace the reid/pelosi regime with some representatives with a smidgen of backbone. and on and on.

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» RE: step one Posted by: garcam123
Who is gonna pay for all this
Posted by: lil ole me on Sep 20, 2008 4:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I hate to tell you folks, but somebody has to pay for this. and guess who that is going to be? its the American taxpayer borrowing money from whoever is willing to lend it to us. we taxpayers already owe tens of thousands of dollars apiece paying for the wars we have ourselves in
It reminds me of an old bumper sticker that read "ass, gas or grass, nobody rides for free. I have a feeling the rides going to get really bumpy soon.

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42 Trillion?
Posted by: pharmawatcher on Sep 20, 2008 5:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I wish the author would have explained how insurance companies can hold on their books policies that guarantee $42 trillion in debt. The National Debt is about $10 trillion, but none of that is insured. All residential real estate debt is about $14 trillion, and while most of that is insured, it certainly isn't all. Commercial real estate debt is under $3 trillion. Corporate debt generally isn't insured. Credit card and auto loan debt may have been collateralized and sold off as CDOs, which may have been insured, but I am not aware of that and even if it was, it certainly is significantly less than real estate debt. So where does $42 trillion come from?

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Who's going to pay for this?
Posted by: AndyF on Sep 20, 2008 6:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not the "masters of the universe" that's for sure. They sliced and diced the securities knowing all along that a big chunk of them would blow up and are now sticking the US taxpayer and the buyers of US debt with the bill. What should be part of any bail-out plan is a tax on financial institutions to reflect the cost of this bail-out.

Perhaps it could be a progressive tax with financial institutions paying a risk based rate - low risk = low tax, high risk = high tax and ideally, a personal assessment on senior management - your company blows up and you cede your personal/family assets to pay for your sins.

It would be great if some of the masters of the universe would accept some personal responsiblity for the mess they have created, but unfortunately just like they have done with money: privatized the gain and socialized the risk, they have done with personal responsibility: all the gains were due to their superior financial skill, all losses due to "market forces byeond thier control".

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X-POLYGAMIST WIFE in ARIZONA
Posted by: X-POLYGAMIST WIFE on Sep 20, 2008 6:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Gov't officials in DC have way too much money to spend. Individual States should collect taxes and give a percentage to the Federal Gov't.

That's gov't by the people.

The average American isn't any better off than FLDS brides at the YFZ Ranch in Eldorado, Texas.

BANKING ON HEAVEN . COM

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My husband's suggestion to get the banks back on their feet
Posted by: djnoll on Sep 20, 2008 9:21 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Last night my husband made one of the most common sense suggestions I have heard in a long time - why not allot the $1 trillion dollars going to the banks and investment companies to the people to pay off their mortgages, their credit cards, and then prevent the banks and investment companies from making anymore credit arrangements until they have stripped their CEOs of their golden parachutes. After all if you are going to use taxpayer money, why not benefit the taxpayer's directly.

This would put money back into the economy, help out those that were victimized by these organizations and their own stupidity (yes, a person who enters into a deal that is too good to be true, is stupid), and put companies like Visa and Mastercard et. al out of business. It is time for this nation to start holding these companies accountable, and if they fail, then it is up to us find solutions on our own to build new local businesses and financial structures that can be accountable to those they deal with, and stop expecting the federal government to bail us out.

It is also time for the people of this nation to start looking long and hard into the mirror and realizing that they contributed to this mess by their own greed and "have it now, buy on credit" mentality. We need to reign in the greed on a personal level as well as demanding that these organizations so the same.

Now I know, as does my husband, that his suggestion in its simplicity would never be considered by anyone in DC. It is really such a shame, because in the end, it would accomplish the same thing (more money to the banks, and open up available funds), but for the politicians, it would not insure their contributions from organizations that will insure their re-elections with this bailout.

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No Trillion for the Fat Cats of Wall Street! Forgive Mortgages!
Posted by: garcam123 on Sep 20, 2008 9:56 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why can't the Feds cause the banks to firgive the outstanding mortgages held by all Americans and forgive all credit card debt and let the companies who preyed on Americans go under.
I also believe that every polititian starting with Phil Gramm and John McCain and every other politician and businessman who perpetuated this robbery of America be made destitute so they can understand what it is to be broke and have no where to turn for help.

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Time to rein in the fat cats
Posted by: angelmom1 on Sep 20, 2008 10:36 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We need to rein in these robbers and take the Golden parachutes away from all of them. Nobody deserves $141,000,000 for causing a business to fail. If the average person had a business and tried to make off with whatever assets the business had including the retirement funds of the workers, before they declared bankruptcy, they'd be thrown in jail. But if your a wall street executive, you can do that and he can expect the government to use our tax dollars to bail you out and make sure your WELL paid to boot. We as a people need to voice our anger and demand justice be done. Throw the lot of them in jail (not federal prison but real prison) and throw away the key. As our nation goes down the tube these fat cats will continue to run things into the ground. Our children's children's children will still be paying for the fat cats of today. We need to demand our nation back and we need to do it now. Before it is sold to the highest bidder.

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» $141,000,000? Posted by: photon's feather
Paulsen, Bernanke and Co.
Posted by: modeler on Sep 20, 2008 11:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What did anyone expect from them? They are representatives of big business and the speculators of the stockmarkets. To hell with the ordinary taxpayer. Repugnican politics and that idiot in the White House have to take the blame for the pending disaster. Eight years of this crap should be enough but unfortunately there is still a large percentage of ordinary Joes committed to support that system of rip-off in favour of big money. Wake up America.

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» An honest politician Posted by: billwald
The Millennium Generation
Posted by: randyf on Sep 20, 2008 5:26 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I agree with all that was said, PLUS we need to figure out a way to PAY for all this. I'm tired of foisting these huge payments off on the Millennium generation while we, the "Boomers," rot in our graves.

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Nobody Is Talking Accountability?
Posted by: ranchero42 on Sep 20, 2008 9:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I realize none of these bastards feels guilty about any of this, because neo-con logic prevails and sounds like schoolyard bully talk: it's YOUR fault for not stopping me from doing what everybody WANTED me to do.
I think everybody needs to hear that there is accountability built into this system. If not, WHY not? Why is Wall Street run like some huge casino where the house always wins and the criminals never become floaters? The first move George Bush needed to do was seriously FREEZE a whole bunch of bank accounts. A shitload of domestic assets needed to be seized until further notice. NOBODY the fuck leaves the country. Do you want I should work up a list of questions for assholes like Fuld and Cox?

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The Federal Reserve is our Enemy
Posted by: bottom-line on Sep 21, 2008 5:37 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The government, acting as minions for the federal reserve and the international banksters, is our enemy and totally criminal. They engineered all this and they are coming for us next -- our property, our homes, and everyhthing we own.They will gobble the entire economy, pension funds, and we will be their entire slaves. Then they will start the killing. The Army Times reports: We hope we don't have to shoot you.

The Federal Rreserve is a private cabal of thieves and murderers and plotters, orchestrating wars all over the globe, to build their wealth and control -- and the corrupt people in government are acting for them, representing them, not us.

The Federal Reserve ENGINEERED all of this, with the help of their planted criminals in the government.

The Banksters want us to pay for their thieving. People must wake up. These people are the same ones who financed Hitler, Stalin, Mao, and they are murderous criminals, and they will not rest until they have killed 6 billion of the world's population, enslaved the rest, and the entire world is their personal possession, every blade of grass and tree and bird.

Listen to Alex Jones, www.infowars.com. He's got financial analysts on there who don't lie, who aren't covering for the Banksters -- people like Webster Tarpley and others. www.infowars.com.

There are people who have a handle on this, and they are not on the controlled media, also owned by the same Banksters. ie Reuters is owned by the Rothschilds. Don't listen to the criminals feed you their brainwashing lies and propaganda. Turn off the TV. Listen to Alex Jones.

We are in a whole lot of trouble.

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still steaming here...
Posted by: ellie on Sep 21, 2008 5:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
after reading this morning that the 'bail out bill' for wall street is only 3 tiny little pages without any kind of regulations or expectations except for congress to SIGN IT!!! well, if they don't we all know that this will become executive order # 1,000,000 from this administration...

no more, no free $$, we don't have the $$ to do this... let the market fall damnit... freeze all bank accounts that feed off wall street investments, no $$ goes out of this country period as of right now!!!

after the dust settles, see what's left and make do with it... our kids and grandkids will never have the $$ to pay off all these rescue debts... the next will be credit cards to go under and then we will have to work on a cash or barter economy...

finally, kick all the elected officials out of office and I do mean all, from the dog catcher on up... dig up the constitution and bill of rights, look at our communities and elect people from our grassroots who seem to be honest and wanting to follow the directions of the people... enough is enough!!!

sure it will be rough for a bit, we'd have to actually take care of each other for once, but this might be the only chance that we the people will ever have to get things back to what it was supposed to be... the only 'do-over' in american history...

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