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My Two Cents, by Chris Farrell

« Middletown, USA | Main | The new face of poverty »

The Geithner plan

Posted by Chris Farrell on Monday, March 23, 2009

On the face of it, the Geithner plan is a disappointment. Economist Paul Krugman is right: It's really just another version of the proposal put forward months ago by former Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson.

But it could work, and I am cautiously optimistic.

For one thing, the three-pronged private-and-public investment partnership is only one part of the Administrations economic rescue plan. We have the fiscal stimulus, the homeowners renegotiation plan and Geithner's approach toward getting the toxic assets off the books of the banks. In combination the three could work.

My suspicion is that Congressional and popular fury over the AIG retention bonuses further convinced the Administration that a straight forward nationalization ala Sweden wouldn't work. It's a good idea, but I'm betting they were afraid of what might be unleashed, the law of unintended consequences.

Last, there probably is some value to the toxic assets, or at least a portion of the portfolio. Right now, there is no market in them and investors are extremely risk averse. But with the public/private partnership buying there may still be some value there.


Comments (2)

What does the retention of AIG bonuses have to do with reluctance to nationalize zombie banks? This appears to be a non-sequitur. The "Law of unintended consequences?" Equally meaningless; there can also be "unintended consequences" of the plan as presently presented.

Krugman is right: taxpayers are being given an unsanitary toxic bath once again, the consequences of which will be, as Krugman states, that when Obama goes to Congress with a real zombie bank nationalization plan, as he eventually must, Congress may be unwilling to cough up the necessary funds.

Obama and Geithner Knew and Bonuses Flew. There are many reasons we cannot trust Geithner. Chief among them is the grossly incompetent way the treasury has handled the AIG bonuses. Both Obama and Geithner knew of the bonues and then acted outraged when the public showed uproar. In addition, they still have not corrected mistakes like TARP. They
should correct what mistakes were done in the past before they ask for more money. Otherwise we are burning money. Get the full details here:

http://tinyurl.com/obamaknew

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The new face of poverty (2)
Mac Wildstar wrote: First of all, nice article Mr. Farrell. Second of all, may I... [read]

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