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, Comment or Ping
Jaime Herrera
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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