It’s a Handout, Not a Bailout
Really, it’s that bad. Yves Smith calls it a “financial coup d’etat.” I smell a financial version of the Patriot Act, whereby no Congressman can, for political reasons, stand up to stop a very bad bill that they have not understood or likely even read.
The short version of the problems:
1/ Unlimited power for the Treasury Department (and no judicial review or Congressional oversight, except for very scant reporting requirements).
2/ No assurance that the government (i.e. we) will not pay too much money for the distressed/toxic assets that lie at the heart of this steaming mess.
3/ No regulatory overhaul.
4/ A decent likelihood that the government’s AAA credit rating will suffer, which means a tumbling dollar. (Update: 9/22: This one, incidentally, is basically inevitable for any proposal big enough to have a chance at averting crisis, so it’s probably not fair to lump it in with the others. Still, it’s something to think about.)
Want to learn more? Good, read this: Why You Should Hate the Treasury Bailout Proposal.

One Comment
The big investors lose nothing while the public absorbs all the losses. Are we hanging by a thread? Is a new French Revolution inevitable?
Sep 21st, 2008
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