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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

Trickle-Up: What a Progressive Bailout Would Look Like

By Joshua Holland, AlterNet. Posted September 28, 2008.


It would keep families in their homes and loosen credit markets without rewarding Wall Street's wheeler-dealers for their recklessness.

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Welcome to America. It's campaign season, and the financial sector is melting down in front of our eyes. Congress' hair is on fire, and it's poised to pass one of the worst taxpayer rip-offs in history.

In the midst of the craziness, Barack Obama is offering up rhetorical cotton candy. "This plan cannot be a welfare program for Wall Street executives," he said. An independent board should be established to "provide oversight and accountability at every step of the way." We shouldn't use the money "to pad CEOs' salaries or allow them to walk away with golden parachutes," he said.

All very risky positions to take.

But at least Obama is saying the right things, even if he's doing so with maddening vagueness.

His opponent is nothing short of incoherent. Last week, John McCain said the "fundamentals of the economy are sound," but by Tuesday, he thought we were facing a "historic national crisis" and looking at "the potential collapse of our financial system." The San Francisco Chronicle called McCain out on his "nearly daily vacillations in reacting to the financial crisis, one day calling for Securities and Exchange Commission chief Chris Cox to resign, the next calling him a 'good man;' opposing a bailout of insurance giant AIG one day and supporting it the next."

Yes, it's campaign season in America, the nation is in crisis, and the Democrats and Republicans are as likely to do the right thing for "Main Street" -- the catchphrase of the day -- as Sarah Palin is to be invited to join Mensa.

But imagine for a moment that we lived in a country with good, progressive governance. We wouldn't find ourselves in our current pickle, but if we did, what might a real bailout plan based on just a little bit of economic justice look like?

In short, it would be based on trickle-up economics. We'd bail out homeowners whose mortgages are on the bubble, and by doing so, the cash we were injecting into the economy would trickle up to ailing financial institutions.

Think about it. The problems our economy is facing are these:

  • Millions of Americans have real estate that's worth less than their mortgage, or close to it, and a great number of those are the mortgage equivalent of crack: They started out cheap -- the banks were the dealers -- but now have ballooning monthly payments that have people between a rock and a hard place. Some people who find themselves in that position were completely irresponsible speculators, some were purely the victims of predatory lending, and most fall somewhere in between.
  • After decades of deregulation -- a bipartisan affair -- the banks weaved together an absolutely incomprehensible mix of securities to back these loans -- derivatives, sold and resold time and again, and insurance-like swaps to supposedly back those securities against default. Now they hold an enormous shit pile of bad paper that's pretty much impossible to understand, much less value. Fearing extinction from all these mortgages going belly-up, they're starting to hoard their cash, and that's tightening credit everywhere and threatening the economy as a whole.

The plan developing in Washington is to take that bad paper off the banks' balance sheets so they stop holding onto their cash like your penny-pinching aunt.

That's pretty much it in a nutshell -- there's talk of re-regulating the financial sector, but few people who pay attention to Congress' doings will hold their breaths waiting for anything substantial on that front.

A progressive bailout would look very different. It would relieve the banks of their burden by buying up mortgages from working people in trouble, rather than giving hundreds of billions to those who are most responsible for getting us into this crisis in the first place.


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Joshua Holland is an AlterNet staff writer.

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It's the Free Market, Baby.
Posted by: ranchero42 on Sep 28, 2008 12:53 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Once upon a time, there was a country with a government that established that certain functions were important to keeping the people FREE. Neither a monarchy nor a corporation run like a monarchy could be trusted to write and enforce laws, print money or allow the marketplace to operate without necessary checks and balances to prevent predatory practices by the rich unto the poor. As soon as I get my passport and somebody points it out on the map, I'm gone, dude.

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Band-Aid tinkering WILL NOT WORK on a FASCIST ECONOMY
Posted by: Mister_PsyOps on Sep 28, 2008 2:43 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Petty downstream tweaking has never worked and never will.

The reason we face the debacle is the unspoken 10,000 pound gorilla Fascist private Ponzi scheme bank better known as the "Federal Reserve" Corp (not federal and minus ZERO reserves). One more time:

The "Federal Reserve" sham basically works like this: The government granted its power to create money to “FED” banks. The “FED” creates money out of thin air, then loans it back to the government [ i.e. the people ] charging interest. The government levies income taxes to pay the interest on the debt.

A nation ruled under the monopoly of parasite Organized Corporate Crime Fascism cannot survive and was not meant to. At least not for the rank and file. That's quite important to realize.

The housing crisis and real estate bubble under it is just one of the treacherous issues at hand but a critical one (there is also bogus 9/11 "war on terror" and an over $1000 trillion dollar derivatives fiasco among others). What has to be realized here is that real estate is not worth a fraction of the value mortgage amounts were written against. Even after recent price slides.

Thus the entire economy is built on quicksand smoke and BS mirrors that chiefly reflect the non-productive greed that rigged it for private abuse.

One interim solution could be to revalue real estate - at least for mortgage rates - to something like a legitimate amount, thus making homes habitable by ordinary, hardworking Americans (rather unlike the Fascist charlatan monopolists that created this horror from day one). Of course, that would be tampering with “free market” so-called “capitalism”. But since we have neither in the west, that objection is no more real than the trap crock of a trillions dollar Wall Street “bailout’ for the good of the USA, mom and apple pie, etc, etc. (Most people with anything like a clue understands an extortion blackmail “bailout” is worse than toxic Kool-Aid insanity)

By the way, KKK racist President Woodrow Wilson was called “progressive” despite rubberstamping the “Federal Reserve” Corp farce into existence and promoting the wholly unnecessary genocide killing fields of WW1 for JP Morgan, Rockefeller and Rothschild dynastic profits. Most historians don’t like the word “progressive” for a slippery piece of Orwellian blather that can mean what virtually anyone wants it to mean.

Beware of labels.

Wilson knew he’d been had as a corporate monopoly stooge months after the fact. Sound familiar?


“A great industrial nation is controlled by its system of credit. Our system of credit is privately concentrated. The growth of the nation, therefore, and all our activities are in the hands of a few men ... We have come to be one of the worst ruled, one of the most completely controlled and dominated, governments in the civilized world—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 the duress of small groups of dominant men.”
PRESIDENT WOODROW WILSON (from Wilson’s book “The New Freedom” published 1913)

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Sorry, this comment has been removed from the system.
Sen Obama....'Bottoms Up' NOW!!!
Posted by: Purple Girl on Sep 28, 2008 5:26 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
although He is my Candidate I am a bit confused why he is not pushing his 'Bottoms Up'economic Doctrine NOW!
Take out the Loan- but Give US the Checks!
Our ancestors Built this country - we were brought up by those they'd Raised to have the Worlds Strongest Work Ethic. who better to bet your money On those who have PROVEN their skills and Abilities for Economic Security- or those who have Gambled it away for the entire Nation?!?
Cut US a damn check and we'll Pay our martgages, car payments, credit cards, utilities- thus backhoeing the fiscal support of these failing Corps. If we are going to just hand them another check- THEN WE BOUGHT THE COMPANY! Certainly we should NOT turn these Corps back into the Private Profiteers hands-Don't like 'socialism' then you shouldn't have Fucked UP, causing Your own fire sale. You Relinquished your control and Ownership while you were driving the Co into the ground selling Snake Oil to US and your Creditors/Investors.
I'm Betting China (mostlikely Shark they'll go to) Would rather bet on US then those who swindled them out of their investment. PLUS we will continue to Buy their Shit because we will not be able to afford Not to at this point- thus Stimulating their economy Too! As N.Campbell points out so accurately- to move a national ideology quickly, a 'Shock' is the Most Readily Convincing...Thus If we are to Hit the Breaks on this decades long failure of 'Trickle Down' , this Wall Street/ Main street Meltdown could be our Ticket to recapturing Our Free Market and Our Democracy.
These Orgnaized Crime Syndicates are the Godfather to the other Corps Still Screwing US
WE BUY this disasterous lending Corps and then WE hold the Purse Stings to the Rest.
Have no doubt this meltdown is not only a Mortgage crisis- it's a Cash Flow Crisis- thus Big Oil won't have the Funds to build their Off shore Platforms,The Big 3 Won't get the funds to Re-Tool avoiding getting their asses being Kicked again by Foreign auto makers. But don't feel sorry for these Two, they have held Our country Hostage since the '70's- All for 'Sludge'.
The Western Oil Incs dug US deeper in complicity with Oil 'Royals' allowing US to be their 'Pin up'Scapegoats. The Big 3 were the Pushers. Lead Sleds, to Econo cars, To "SUV's".
Oil Incs are the Suppliers and the Big 3 have been the unscruples Pushers!!Perhaps if WE are the Banker, Then THIS TIME they will have NO Choice but to do What we Tell Them!!! GET THE HELL OUT OF THE M.E.AND THE F*CK OFF OIL!!! THEY HAVE BEEN LITERALLY KILLING US ('70's hostge crisis, Oil crisis, highjacking and plane bombings, embassy attacks....."Deja Vu all over again"- except it has NEVER STOPPED, The just stopped reporting it or providing the 'Dots' since they STOLE THE FREE PRESS!
It is Blatantly Obvious Which Candidate will not only Give US more of the Same, but is GREATLY resposnible for the Entire mess We Are in NOW! Keating 5....'Anthrax from Iraq'lay at the feet of Sen (Sin) Benedict McCain! Let's not destroy our country Further by Denying the obvious FACTS....Mac has a 'rap Sheet' regarding Embezzlement and Fraud. He also has a good deal of suspecion regarding is Proclaims 'Hero 'Status (Collaborations?). He has been a appeasing friend to Big Oil since he stepped into the Senate.
WHAT DO THEY CALL IT WHEN SPACE & TIME FOLD OVER ON EACH OTHER? Or Must we see the entire Blood dot trail for ourselves?
It is no Leap nor stretch of the Imagination, John McCain is smack Dab in the Middle of the Cheney Corp High Crimes!

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» Chicago Politician Posted by: theVRWCwhodatesLiberals
parrotuya
Posted by: parrotuya on Sep 28, 2008 10:36 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What we have here is a "crisis of greed," not a financial crisis. Let Wall St. fail, let the credit markets seize up. In a free market, enterprising capitalists always find a way to trade goods. For those of us who are informed, $700 billion won't be enough to bail out anyone. The crash is coming. So get ready.

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Mr. Holland --
Posted by: Last Chance on Sep 28, 2008 10:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I heard Nancy Pelosi has already taken a mortgage bail out for home owners off the table. Is that true?

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By This Time It Should Be Clear --
Posted by: Last Chance on Sep 28, 2008 11:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Money is such an unstable way of trading services that working people will always be swindled by manipulators and their capitalist empire is a predatory boom-and-bust sytem designed to create millionaires and billionaires riding on the backs of millions of poor people. Logically there should be no rich and poor, but communities of gentle people taking good care of each other. The only way to accomplish that is to return to the land as the basis of all commonly held wealth. Thus, when we grow our own orchards and gardens, when we farm for family and community and say to hell with the market, and when we account each hour of labor as equal to one credit, we no longer need big banks, big corporations or big governments. So, help the people learn to support and govern themselves with their own continental network of self-reliant villages that grow their own food, build their own shelter, sew their own clothes, plan their own families, home school their own children and carefully surround themselves with miles of healthy wilderness. Then we can all live in peace with each other and in balance with the planet that supports us.

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The Sham is a Done Deal ... What We Need to Do Now ...
Posted by: mmckinl on Sep 28, 2008 12:02 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Unless there is an act of God this bailout looks to be a done deal but the fight must go on on several fronts ...

~A new plan such as the Brad De Long / Stiglitz Plan a la the Scandinavian Plan must be readied for implementation by the Democrats.

Why ? Because the Bush-Paulson-Pelosi Bailout does NOT address the problem we have now, the freezing of the credit markets! The credit markets can still freeze up and will probably do so down the line as the bailout does nothing to address insolvent banks.


~Preparations should be made to nationalize the Federal Reserve.

It has been obvious that Bernanke and the Federal Reserve ignored this catastrophe until too late and then instead of implementing a Scandinavian type plan began trading treasuries for worthless junk from the banks. The Federal Reserve, a private corporation, put their stock holders, the member banks, before the health of the economy and the financial security of the Nation.


If we are lucky the banking system will limp along until Jan 20. I'm skeptical that will be the case. As said before, this bailout plan does little to resolve the trust issue in the credit markets caused by insolvent banks and nothing to stop a crashing economy.

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» What We Need to Do Now Posted by: Last Chance
Don't just bailout Main Street. Make them change the policies long term.
Posted by: GrantBurkeVT on Sep 28, 2008 1:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It was the policies rigged against Main Street for Wall Street that was the cause of socializing poverty and terrorism in the first place.

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How to REALLY save the economy-- and a whole lot more
Posted by: kwalla on Sep 28, 2008 1:09 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
PUT PEOPLE TO WORK; FIGHT GLOBAL WARMING AND RAISE THE VALUE ON HOMES... here's how:

What we NEED to do is to stimulate the economy by spending public money to do "green remodeling" (adding insulation and other energy saving features/updates to buildings and also installing site-appropriate alternative energy generation: solar, wind). Such measures applied to both public and private property would:

- get money in the hands of skilled construction laborers who are out of work;
- reduce energy consumption and thus CO2 production as well as lower the utility bills at a time when energy prices are rising exponentially; and finally
- raise the value of residential and commercial real estate.

This is a WIN-WIN-WIN situation all around. This has been done in a very limited fashion via tax credits in the 2005 Energy Bill-- a number of which have been renewed or are currently slated to be renewed-- but we MUST increase the funding level dramatically. If the bottom line is that we need to inject significant public money into the economy in order to divert any of several different great depression-like scenarios, let us do it in a way that maximizes the benefits.

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Good summary by Holland
Posted by: Earthian on Sep 28, 2008 5:08 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is a superb summary of the problem and what to do instead of the pro-corporate, pro-plutocrat solution. Bravo. Thank you.

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This bailout will only delay the inevitable.
Posted by: andabottleof_rum on Sep 28, 2008 6:07 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
An economic collapse is going to happen sooner or later, even if this bailout prevents it from happening now or transforms it from a sudden catastrophic implosion into a grinding long-term recession.

If the latter were to occur, we could slip into an economic depression nice and slowly, which would be the best way to enter a depression from the standpoint of political and economic elites. In this scenario, ordinary people are less likely to react with a sudden anger that could lead to instability, and they would be more apt to accept declining standards of living, having the time to adjust.

In the end, the results would be much the same: increased poverty and economic stress for the majority, relative privilege and comfort shored up for the leaders.

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» That's right --- Posted by: Last Chance
Joshua's article is dead on spot, but unfortunately...
Posted by: NoMcCainPalin on Sep 28, 2008 11:37 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
rampant greed has infected our nation like the old-time bubonic plague.

Without FDR-style leadership to convince the top 5% of American wage earners to share their wealth with the bottom 95% by paying higher taxes, the rich will continue to get richer in spite of Wall Street reforms. Meanwhile, middle class incomes will continue to fall or, at best, flat-line as the U.S. becomes a fractured, Have and Have-Not society.

The question before us is simple. Of the two presidential candidates -- Obama and McCain -- who would better represent the bottom 95% of Americans being threatened by the credit crisis?

For the answer, look at their lifestyles. Obama owns one house and one automobile. McCain has at least seven homes and 13 vehicles including several luxury cars. When it comes to gluttony, the wealthy Arizona senator is light years ahead of Obama.

McCain's greed aside, could the bottom 95% trust him to put their needs above the top 5%?

I don't think so. For proof, consider his wife's national liquor distributorship.

As reported by the Los Angeles Times on June 23, 2008, Cindy McCain's booze-dealing Hensley Co. opposed public safety groups such as "Mothers Against Drunk Driving" (MADD) in fighting proposed federal rules that would require alcohol-content information on every package of beer, wine and liquor.

To advance their cause, Hensley executives, including John McCain's son, Andrew, have written at least 10 letters to the Treasury Department and contributed tens of thousands of dollars to alcohol industry lobbyists.

A member of the powerful National Beer Wholesalers Association, Cindy's company has run afoul of health-advocacy groups that have tried to rein in appeals to young drinkers. For example, Hensley distributes fruit-flavored alcohol drinks (nicknamed "alcopops") that public-health groups say put young and underage consumers at risk by disguising the effects of intoxication.

Cindy McCain controls 68 percent of the privately-held company stock, along with her children and the senator's son from his first marriage. According to the L.A. Times, should McCain become president and his wife retains her ownership in Hensley, she would set a precedent for outside corporate activity by a first lady.

After the Hensley article came out, the McCain campaign team issued a terse statement saying, "Any decisions going forward will be made when the senator wins the election and takes office, but not before."

With an arrogant attitude like that, there can be no mistaking how the bottom 95% of Americans would be treated by a McCain administration. The top 5% will get richer while rest of us struggle to survive.

Finally, if you are an undecided voter, learn about the REAL John McCain and his so-called "heroic" war record by clicking on: Vote Against McCain (HOTTEST anti-McCain site on the Web)

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when will we revolt?
Posted by: georgiaorwell on Sep 29, 2008 1:39 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Eliminate all federal income tax on individuals earning under $100,000. I think federal income tax is illegal anyway as I understand it.

Mr. Holland, thank you for the article and your good ideas. This bailout cannot/must not pass - it would absolutely confirm that our representative government has collectively lost their minds. They treat taxpayer dolalrs like they're never ending. I can see the fat cats and Bush grinning over what idiots we all are. Does Congress ever, ever, ever do anything right by the middle class? It seems not! This scenario should be like the Boston Tea Party - only our forefathers had some spine.

The saddest realization is that we have for so long believed that we had some kind of freedoms and that we were the greatest country on earth. Newsflash: living abroad for a couple of years has shown me that the US has created a matrix illusion and people who have not studied or traveled or seen how other countries handle their finances have no ideas how much worse off American citizens are than, say, most countries in western Europe.

When you vote in November, remember how your Congressman/woman voted on this bailout. I seriously do not see how this bailout will benefit Americans on their homes, credit cards, or quality of lives. As a sidebar: I hope Cindy Sheehan beats Nancy Pelosi in Ca.

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Any action taken must be FAIR
Posted by: Symp on Sep 29, 2008 6:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't care if you call it socialism for the poor or whatever, the *ONLY* valid help to the economy must be FAIR to everybody.

It is NOT fair to payout those that took on variable interest rate mortgages, payed low payments and live in homes they cannot really afford, and bail them out so they continue to live in those homes.

Rather, it would be far more productive to close them out by buying their mortgage, reselling it on the free market. In the meantime, government would sponsor inexpensive housing solutions, using existing inventory and new if required.

This new economic activity would result in assistance to those in trouble without rewarding them for their lapse in judgment.

Of course, I want to see Chief Executive compensation CAPPED at 5x mean-employee income, with a ladder up to 10x pay for HISTORIC performance. This would be for ALL CEs throughout the economy. If they want to earn more, they can invest it like Jack and Jill on the factory floor. This measure alone - proportionality to mean employee income - would encourage CEs to LIFT incomes for all. That's TRICKLE-UP and that's the only way to do it.

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The downside of "trickle down economics",
Posted by: roncypert on Sep 29, 2008 8:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"peons".

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Great!
Posted by: fanny666 on Sep 29, 2008 1:53 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great article, and you're right. And I'm glad it can no longer be said, "critics just criticize, and never offer an alternative..."

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Need a laugh so you don't shoot yourself?
Posted by: Grandma Crabby on Sep 29, 2008 2:35 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have to laugh in order to avoid going nuts so I put together a silly video on one of the root causes of the current mess, predatory lending.

Granny's crazy videos = Go get a chuckle!

Deregulation deserves blame but perhaps even worse is how the regulations that do exist were stolen out of Fast Buck Freddie's playbook. Over the years, banks and lending institutions were allowed to raise rates thru the roof and sell loans that were written in such a way that even a perfect payment record would never give it paid off. Car title rip off places are the perfect example but the same practices were all over the mortgage industry too. The ass-holes made tons of money while laughing at the stupidity of their customers.

This entire fiasco is a disaster years in the making. Trickle down economics has certainly shown itself to be voodoo economics. Gag, I hate agreeing with a Bush.

Luv,
Granny

Granny's crazy videos = Go get a chuckle!

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Here is a letter to Congress
Posted by: wabbit2000 on Sep 30, 2008 10:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Senator Feinstein,
I just wanted to let you know that I am 100% against the proposed bailout. Why should I, the hardworking taxpayer, pay for the mistakes of CEOs that make millions of dollars of a year? If I make a mistake, no one bails me out. I think that the corporations that invested and insured these toxic mortgage bond investments knew the risks and made a mistake. They should go bankrupt and let the other fiscally conservative financial institutions take over. The FDIC should be easily able to cover any bank failures at a much lower cost.

By adding another 700 billion to one trillion dollars to the national debt, Paulson is just ensuring that interest rates will go up, real estate will crash, unemployment will soar, and foreign central banks will abandon the dollar.

Here are some other options to consider other than the bailout:

1. Why not let other banks join the unlamented Brothers Lehman in bankruptcy court, and start a new bank with taxpayers' money?
2. Have the Treasury pay interest on delinquent mortgages, and make them whole.
a. Why not have the Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae offer New or Refinance Loans for EVERY AMERICAN at 4-5% APR /30Year fixed Loans up to what every owe right now. If they have a job and have been able to pay their mortgage for the last 3 months before an ARM was reset then they qualify on their PRIMARY HOME and not investors. FOR 6 MONTHS. Then have the Banks do what they do normally.
b. This will do a few things:
i. It will allow people who were either un educated on the type of loan that they got or was part a predatory leaning practices , it will help them
ii. It will give these Mortgage Back Securities (MBS)to give a real value and we can understand what they are truly worth
iii. This refinance will help bank get liquidity they need right now.
iv. This give all American more money since 30% of their gross income goes top their mortgage payment it is like getting a tax cut. This will drive Consumer spending and get the economies going.
v. Here is an example
1. Most American’s home prices are $200k, If they are paying Property Taxes $3000/year + $200/year in Insurance.
a. 6.5% = Monthly Payment $1671
b. 5% APR = Monthly Payment $1480 SAVINGS Of $191/Month or $2292 year
c. 4.5% APR = Monthly Payment = $1420 SAVINGS OF $251/month or $3012
vi. This will also stabilize Property Prices and stop foreclosures.
vii. WOW, give back American People money and that will help everyone. .
c. Also we need to change the way Rating Agencies for Banks and Americans are how they are governed. FICO Scores, the number that people have to determine rates for loans and other financial instruments,are not transparent and very arbitrary. The rules are favores banks. One blemish could cost hundreds if not thousands of dollars in intereset over a person's life time if the score is low. And now bankruptcy laws for individuals are ever more pro business then the individuals.
d. AIG should become the Health Insurance Agency for all Uninsured Americans in a Progressive fee based system based on income. This will allow people making minimum wage more secure about themselves. This also would reduce premiums for all Americans. Also it will help repay for AIG Bailout.
3. Unpackaged the mortgage loans/bonds, negotiate and convert each individual loan into a low 30 year fixed or a quick short sale agreement for example. The government could set up incentives and the framework to do this efficiently.
Needless to say legislation needs to be passed to prevent this from happening again that includes regulation of mortgages including banning the packaging and selling of mortgages, requiring at least 20 percent down, banning ARM loans, and requiring a maximum mortgage payment to income ratio.

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Right Wing Psychoholic In Denial
Posted by: Right Wing Psychoholic In Denial on Sep 30, 2008 11:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We may need a progressive economic type like

Palin to pull us out of this tailspin that a

democrat congress put us in.

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» RE: What the hell are you smoking? Posted by: Right Wing Psychoholic In Denial
Thanks for creating a real bailout plan!
Posted by: CA NOW on Sep 30, 2008 2:34 PM   
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Thanks for coming up with a real bailout plan! We linked to this in our post today "Gender, Race and the Bailout" http://www.canow.org/canoworg/2008/09/gender-race-and.html

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ENOUGH BITCHING...
Posted by: grindermonkey on Oct 1, 2008 7:33 AM   
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Let's reinstate the Glass Steagal Act, separate investment banking casinos from commercial banks and let these speculators use their own money to invest in these zombie financial scams that they keep insisting are worthy of government backing. Why should these financial mutations be considered as part of a rescue effort if the Congressional Budget Office can't explain their exotic value to the public.

The biggest political danger here is that these tin horns divide us into those who paid their mortgage and those who didn't or couldn't. HOME owners should have a dependable financial system to protect them from HOUSING speculators who have used the banking system inappropriately to drive up prices to the breaking point and now beyond. This distinction between owners and speculators needs to be legislatively defined and regulated. We are not a nation of real estate or used car hucksters.

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