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Monday, September 22, 2008

Joe is pissed

So Secretary Treasurer Paulson’s Big Plan to save the economy basically entails you and me buying up all of the banks’ bad paper at inflated prices. Furthermore, the plan specifies that Treasury’s activities are beyond review and makes no provision for expanded oversight or regulation of the industry. Essentially, Paulson is telling us we need to hand over a huge pile of cash to the geniuses that got us into this mess and then walk away. Well, fuck that.

Krugman has a more refined explanation of why this is exactly wrong.

The logic of the crisis seems to call for an intervention, not at step 4, but at step 2: the financial system needs more capital. And if the government is going to provide capital to financial firms, it should get what people who provide capital are entitled to — a share in ownership, so that all the gains if the rescue plan works don’t go to the people who made the mess in the first place.

That’s what happened in the savings and loan crisis: the feds took over ownership of the bad banks, not just their bad assets. It’s also what happened with Fannie and Freddie. (And by the way, that rescue has done what it was supposed to. Mortgage interest rates have come down sharply since the federal takeover.)

But Mr. Paulson insists that he wants a “clean” plan. “Clean,” in this context, means a taxpayer-financed bailout with no strings attached — no quid pro quo on the part of those being bailed out. Why is that a good thing? Add to this the fact that Mr. Paulson is also demanding dictatorial authority, plus immunity from review “by any court of law or any administrative agency,” and this adds up to an unacceptable proposal.

I’m aware that Congress is under enormous pressure to agree to the Paulson plan in the next few days, with at most a few modifications that make it slightly less bad. Basically, after having spent a year and a half telling everyone that things were under control, the Bush administration says that the sky is falling, and that to save the world we have to do exactly what it says now now now.

But I’d urge Congress to pause for a minute, take a deep breath, and try to seriously rework the structure of the plan, making it a plan that addresses the real problem. Don’t let yourself be railroaded — if this plan goes through in anything like its current form, we’ll all be very sorry in the not-too-distant future.

This plan is profoundly stupid, fantastically expensive, and eviscerates any notion of a free market. Privatize the profit and socialize the loss, protect the wealthy shareholders and fuck the taxpayers – welcome to the new American Capitalism.

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