From Bloomberg, and practically every other news outlet in the free world:
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...VQk&refer=home
QUOTE: Buying illiquid assets amounts to swapping taxpayers’ “cash for trash,” Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz said in a Jan. 31 panel discussion at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. “You shouldn’t chase good money after bad.”
Stiglitz, a professor at Columbia University in New York and a former adviser to President Bill Clinton, said the plan would leave taxpayers paying for years of imprudent lending by banks.
END QUOTE:
Edit: Now Paul Krugman gets in a word:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/02/op...prod=permalink
QUOTE: If news reports are right, the bank rescue plan will contain two main elements: government purchases of some troubled bank assets and guarantees against losses on other assets. The guarantees would represent a big gift to bank stockholders; the purchases might not, if the price was fair — but prices would, The Financial Times reports, probably be based on “valuation models” rather than market prices, suggesting that the government would be making a big gift here, too.
And in return for what is likely to be a huge subsidy to stockholders, taxpayers will get, well, nothing.
END QUOTE:
This is the first time I have started a thread, so forgive me if I started with what seems like a popular target. But I am alarmed that this thing is actually getting air time. My intention was not to parse the details of the plan but to ask the following question:
Is it actually possible that the American public will accept this proposal?
"Here, bend over this beautiful granite countertop and these nice senators will explain all the details to you."
Is this type of debt transfer from the banking industry to the taxpayer taken into consideration with the Ka-Poom theory? And we haven't even gotten serious regulatory concessions from them yet!
Maybe I am missing something, but this looks like the play of the game right here. This is the end game if it is done correctly.
Will
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...VQk&refer=home
QUOTE: Buying illiquid assets amounts to swapping taxpayers’ “cash for trash,” Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz said in a Jan. 31 panel discussion at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. “You shouldn’t chase good money after bad.”
Stiglitz, a professor at Columbia University in New York and a former adviser to President Bill Clinton, said the plan would leave taxpayers paying for years of imprudent lending by banks.
END QUOTE:
Edit: Now Paul Krugman gets in a word:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/02/op...prod=permalink
QUOTE: If news reports are right, the bank rescue plan will contain two main elements: government purchases of some troubled bank assets and guarantees against losses on other assets. The guarantees would represent a big gift to bank stockholders; the purchases might not, if the price was fair — but prices would, The Financial Times reports, probably be based on “valuation models” rather than market prices, suggesting that the government would be making a big gift here, too.
And in return for what is likely to be a huge subsidy to stockholders, taxpayers will get, well, nothing.
END QUOTE:
This is the first time I have started a thread, so forgive me if I started with what seems like a popular target. But I am alarmed that this thing is actually getting air time. My intention was not to parse the details of the plan but to ask the following question:
Is it actually possible that the American public will accept this proposal?
"Here, bend over this beautiful granite countertop and these nice senators will explain all the details to you."
Is this type of debt transfer from the banking industry to the taxpayer taken into consideration with the Ka-Poom theory? And we haven't even gotten serious regulatory concessions from them yet!
Maybe I am missing something, but this looks like the play of the game right here. This is the end game if it is done correctly.
Will
Comment