Crisis/Bailout Update
Where are we now?
+ Reports off the Hill say that a deal is done. $700B total, greater Congressional oversight, restrictions on executive pay, no bankruptcy law changes, no money for affordable housing, the (useless) House GOP insurance proposal stays in but only as an option, and, most importantly, the government gets equity warrants in case the toxic assets really are as bad as everyone fears. Obama and McCain are both on board.
+ Paul Krugman and Brad DeLong are now openly favoring Swedish-style nationalization instead of the Paulson plan–which, for the record, Yves Smith has been pushing since the beginning–even though Krugman, at least, recognizes that a nationalization plan is political poison until at least after the election.
+ House GOP aides and their sycophantic know-nothing cheerleaders are pleased with themselves for having put a wrench in the works mid-week to make the bill more “free-market friendly” (they are thinking of their insurance proposal), but meanwhile a more realistic appraisal (also from a GOP aide) tells it like it is:
1) This is, essentially, the same bill. Total deal is $700b, which Paulson or next Treasury Secretary can spend the first $250b even if he believes unnecessary. He/She can spend second $450b if thought necessary. A new bill isn’t passed with veto proof majorities to repeal it. This is substantively identical to the original Paulson plan. Congress always had the power to repeal some or all of the authority if it has veto proof majorities.
2) As for Acorn and bankruptcy, they were never in the bill. Dodd/Frank tried to push those in mid/week, they weren’t in the plan already rejected by conservatives on Monday. Even Obama conceded that those provisions would come out. They were simply a red herring, used for extra bargaining power by the left.
3) Lipstick has been put on the pig, and perhaps some Members will be fooled by it, but their constituents will not. I think some political careers will be ended over this.
+ Oh, and remember that AIG bailout? It was probably necessary to keep the credit default swap market from cratering, but it doesn’t make things look any better that it saved Goldman Sachs (Henry Paulson’s old firm) from a $20B loss.

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