MONEY CULTURE

Nice Bailout. Now Pay For It!

How are we going to pay for Wall Street's $700 billion rescue?

 
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To spend is to tax, as capitalist deity Milton Friedman is said to have put it. If so, over the last several months, we've seen an orgy of tax increases, and potential increases. Time was, that prospect would have set off a revolution.

Consider the spree of actions that have the potential—directly and indirectly—to cost taxpayers money: the government accepting $30 billion of Bear Stearns drecky collateral for a $29 billion loan to JPMorgan; giving investment banks access to the Fed's discount window; assuming responsibility for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, guaranteeing money-market funds (up to $50 billion); making a big loan to AIG (up to $85 billion); and now proposing the mother of all bailouts—up to $700 billion.

It's difficult to quantify the costs of these activities for a few reasons. Even though the government has now formally agreed to guarantee the debt of Fannie and Freddie, the White House says it doesn't see the necessity—shock me!—to include the cost of doing so in the budget. In theory, Hank Paulson could drive a good bargain in buying hundreds of billions of dollars of distressed assets. As a result, the government could recoup a lot of the costs of the latest bailout proposal. And most of the other efforts are loans, which are designed to be paid back. To get a sense of how good the government thinks the credit risks are, the Federal Reserve is charging AIG (until last week a Dow component) an interest rate of three-month LIBOR plus 8.5 percent—about 11.4 percent. That's a lower rate than many credit-card customers pay, but a higher rate than most junk-rated companies pay. But it's almost certain that all these bailouts will cost taxpayers tens of billions, possibly hundreds of billions, of dollars. Unless the laws of mathematics are repealed, we will have to pay this money back in the form of higher taxes or lower government spending.

But have you heard anyone in authority asking about the $700 billion bailout: how do you propose to pay for it?

There seems to be a center-based consensus that some form of bailout is of vital importance to the nation's economy, to its image and to the global financial system. I agree. But important national projects are worth paying for. Especially when the projects in question are a sop to an industry that has asked for—and received—so much from Washington in the past decade. Think about everything Wall Street has been given since the late 1990s: cuts in the capital-gains tax, dividend tax and estate tax, cuts in marginal income tax rates, free-trade agreements, low interest rates, light regulation. The promise was that doing the bidding of the financial-services industry would deliver solid growth and boost incomes for everyone. It didn't. This business cycle, in which job growth was generally anemic, ended with median incomes about where they were at the end of the last business cycle. The S&P 500 is basically where it was 10 years ago. Sure, we got cheap mortgages, all the credit we could eat, and some higher corporate income-tax payments for a few years. But now Wall Street wants it all back in the form of bailouts.

So anybody who pops up on television, or in a congressional hearing, to talk about the vital necessity of this regrettable bailout, should be asked to give a sense of how much it might cost and then to come up with a way to pay for it. Two hundred billion dollars? Fine, please delineate $200 billion in spending cuts over the next two years or $200 billion in tax increases to pay to clean up your mess. Which cabinet-level agency should be zeroed out? Which benefits programs cut? Which component of the defense budget gutted? I'd love to hear what former Lehman Brothers CEO Richard Fuld, or President Bush (who continues to cower behind Paulson's large frame) or Goldman SachsCEO Lloyd Blankfein and Morgan Stanley CEO John Mack, whose butts were just saved, has to propose. After all, every dollar spent by the taxpayers cleaning up Wall Street's mess is one more added to the massive and expanding deficit, one more dollar that will have to be paid back with interest.

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: tired and old @ 03/24/2009 2:16:55 PM

    WALL STREET AND THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES.

    CEO PREAMBLE.

    We, the SUPER RICH of the United States, in order to form a more perfect SYSTEM OF CORPORATE GREED, establish CORPORATE BAILOUTS, insure FINANCIAL tranquility of OUR TOO BIG TO FAIL BUSINESSES AND OUR OWN PERSONAL WEALTH, provide for OUR COMMON defence AGAINST PAYING TAXES, promote OUR own general welfare, and secure the blessings of CONGRESSIONAL FINANCIAL ASSISTENCE to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this NEW Constitution for the United States WITH EMPHASIS ON BAILOUTS AND THE TWO DIFFERENT SETS OF RULES FOR THE SEPARATE CLASSES " THE SUPER RICH " AND THOSE " WE THE PEOPLE " WHO SUPPORT US WITH THEIR TAX DOLLARS.

  • Posted By: jpinsatx@gmail.com @ 10/23/2008 11:32:44 AM

    More Trickle-Down Economics will NOT work. More corporate
    tax breaks and deregulation mean executives are paid millions
    of dollars, jobs are outsourced and creditors become loan
    sharks!

    Re-Unite and Rebuild!

    Focus on Rebuilding Infrastructure, both physical and human.

    The Physical Infrastructure that supports a society, such as
    roads, bridges, water supply, waste water, power grids, flood
    management, communications, etc.

    The Human Infrastructure that supports and makes possible the
    American Way of Life: The Middle Class, The Working Class...
    The Middle Income!

    Who will...

    1) Stop job outsourcing?
    2) Bring outsourced jobs back?
    3) Make quality education and job training available to all citizens?
    4) Make quality health care available to all citizens?
    5) Promote, support and protect small business growth?
    6) Protect consumers from banking, lending and credit bureau abuse?
    7) Protect the Constitutional rights of all citizens?

    Re-Unite and Rebuild!

  • Posted By: Nowforthetruth @ 10/07/2008 8:13:29 AM

    Obama is getting a bump out of this because people are not being reminded of the whole history where the economy is concerned, and who did what when. Call it bias by omission. The media simply says that the economy is Obamas strong issue, but never discusses the facts in detail. Further, who had a majority when is rarely relevant. If the simplistic Party In Power model were true, then the Democrats would not have needed the House Republicans when they tried to pass the bailout bill, as Democrats have the majority in both houses and there is no threat of a veto. In theory, they do not need the Republicans to vote at all. In fact, something like twelve (12) Democrats from Barney Franks own banking committee voted against the bill. Obviously, it is not so simple and the media does the voter a disservice by doing little more than reinforcing the error. A similar argument would be to say that the economy appeared to be doing fine until the Democrats took over control of Congress and the power of the purse, then it tanked. As an aside, the media also misleads regarding the Clinton economy when they fail to mention that it also ended in a recession, requiring the first round of Bush stimulus checks immediately after he took office..


    Do Obama and the Democrats deserve a lift in the polls as a result of the financial and mortgage problems? The answer from history is a clear NO. Here's the lead of a New York Times story on September 30, 1999:

    "Fannie Mae Eases Credit To Aid Mortgage Lending" [link below]. That's 1999 folks. Clinton Administration, I believe.

    Here's the lead of a New York Times story on Sept. 11, 2003:

    "The Bush administration today recommended the most significant regulatory overhaul in the housing finance industry since the savings and loan crisis a decade ago. "[see link below] The Democrats killed the reforms.

    McCain said in co-sponsoring the Federal Housing Enterprise Regulatory Reform Act of 2005, S. 190:

    "If Congress does not act, American taxpayers will continue to be exposed to the enormous risk that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac pose to the housing market, the overall financial system and the economy as a whole. The Democrats killed the Bill.

    What was Barney Frank and fellow Democrats saying at the time of these attempted reforms? According to reports, Representative Barney Frank(D-MA) claimed of the thrifts :

    "These two entities -- Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac -- are not facing any kind of financial crisis, the more people exaggerate these problems, the more pressure there is on these companies, the less we will see in terms of affordable housing."

    Representative Mel Watt (D-NC) added of the reforms "I don't see much other than a shell game going on here, moving something from one agency to another and in the process weakening the bargaining power of poorer families and their ability to get affordable housing." [ See Community Reinvestment Act, link bel

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