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     Oct 4, 2008
Page 1 of 2
The mother of all golden parachutes
By Hossein Askari and Noureddine Krichene

Conventional wisdom in Washington believes that a slightly modified version of Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson's initially US$700 billion bank bailout plan will pass the House of Representatives on Friday following the Senate's approval on Wednesday.

Conventional wisdom fails to see that Paulson's "Troubled Asset Relieve Program" (TARP), now an $810 billion measure thanks to an increase in the cap on federal deposit insurance and tax breaks, will do little to alleviate the ominous financial and economic clouds hanging over the United States and the rest of the world.

The initial defeat of the plan hatched by Paulson and Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke in the House of Representatives at the start of the week should have ushered in the end of the

 

George W Bush's administration disorderly financial policies, lax financial supervision and the irresponsible expansionary monetary policy of the Federal Reserve Board era under former chairman Alan Greenspan and Bernanke, his successor.

It was a setback to the inflationist forces that wanted to put the burden of the speculative bank losses on the American workers based on the thesis that the Paulson-Bernanke plan is better for American families and their children than any other economic stabilization plan, plans which were not presented and debated. Bankers wanted to get rid of their speculative impaired assets by exchanging trash for cash, with an attendant cost to the economy of hyperinflation, in turn exacerbating food and energy price inflation and eroding family real incomes.

TARP has been a coordinated ploy to dump troubled assets onto the government in a "quick and clean" way. If the plan is approved by the US Congress, Paulson would immediately issue Treasury bills that would be bought by banks, the proceeds from the sale of Treasury bills would in turn finance the purchase troubled assets. At the same time, remember that Bernanke has already injected over $630 billion of liquidity into the banking system.

Throughout their history, US banks have never been so flush with liquidity that is remunerated by the Fed. By getting money at very low rates from the Fed and making profits in purchasing Treasury bills, banks will make huge riskless profits, and the financing of the TARP will be fully guaranteed without requiring financing from sovereign wealth funds. Paulson and Bernanke have failed since August 2007 to re-inflate unworthy (housing) assets, despite the Fed's extremely low interest rates and aggressive monetary policy. It would appear that they found out that, only by combing fiscal and monetary policies and forcing unusual expansion of both, can they remove "clogging" troubled assets and achieve their re-inflationary objective.

The battle between the supporters of the Paulson-Bernanke plan and its opponents has been a battle between debtors and bankers and those who would like to safeguard American public finance, equity among the various segments of society, and seek to restore orderly adjustment of the financial system and asset prices.

Debtors and bankers would like to protect their acquired wealth, walk free from debt and dump unworthy financial assets onto the government budget. By inducing hyperinflation, they will be able to extinguish real value of their liabilities. The bankers' group maintains that only the government can recapitalize the banking sector; they claim that rejection of bank recapitalization by the government would be fatal for the economy, and policymakers would live to regret the rebuttal of the TARP.

TARP's opponents, wary of the maneuvers of its supporters and observing that the sky has not or is not falling, see clearly the dangers for the economy, its inequity, the long economic decline that will ensue, and their constituency's discontent.

The proponents of TARP have maintained that the US Treasury will make money buying worthless paper. At one point, the paper will become valuable, the Treasury will resell at much higher prices than it paid and will make money; hence, the Paulson-Bernanke plan will end up making profits for taxpayers! Some dubbed the TARP as a genius deal by the two men. If proponents of this argument are certain that worthless financial paper will become very valuable in the future, why then do financial institutions not keep this paper, sell it later and reap profits? Why don't speculators grab the stuff?

Unfortunately, bad debt rarely becomes good debt. Throwing good money after bad money is not a sound business practice. If a modified TARP is adopted, an additional exposure for taxpayers is that the Treasury may keep coming back for additional amounts of financing, with no end in sight, and lawmakers will be hard-pressed not to give in, as they would have already invested so much in the plan.

TARP's proponents have forcefully argued that without a massive bailout, the economy would literally collapse. Banks will fail, retirement savings will disappear, no more credit will flow to the economy and the economy will shed jobs. If bailed out, banks will resume lending, and the economy will continue to grow. Unfortunately, their arguments are not supported by actual data.

The US economy has shown remarkable resilience so far since August 2007; it has continued to grow, albeit at slower rate, at 2% a year in 2008. Credit to the economy has continued to grow at a high rate of 9% so far in 2008. The banking system has never been so flush with liquidity as it has been now, not only in the US, but also in Europe and Asia.

Not all the US economy is a speculative economy. The non-speculative components - agriculture, industry and services - continue to have access to credit at very low interest rates both domestically and in the international markets.

While there has been no credit squeeze for the productive sectors of the economy, as clearly supported by the Fed's data, the US economy, and even the world economy, have been undeniably affected by extremely high price inflation in the essential components of consumer spending, namely energy, food, rent, mortgage payments and health. Price inflation deflates real quantities. Real consumption of high marginal propensity consumer groups (wage earners) has declined under the effect of exorbitant energy and food price inflation, leading to a reverse income multiplier effect. In addition, national savings have turned negative leading to a decline in real investment. Accordingly, unemployment rose to 6.1% in 2008.

Bernanke and Paulson appear blind to the underlying reason for the financial crisis. It is a housing bubble that has not completely burst. Prices are still inflated relative to indicators such as disposable income. Price declines still have some way to go. Banks do have the money to lend but are unwilling to do so at these inflated prices unless the borrower puts down a much higher down payment than that required in normal times. This would appear to be good banking practice and will not be altered by the TARP.

The uneven-handedness of the TARP is obvious. It purports to protect one group (bankers) at the expense of another group (workers, pensioners) arguing that the gains of the former serve the economy while the losses of the latter have no incidence on the economy.

Unprecedented action
Such a massive bailout of the whole banking system has never been adopted in any country before. Banking bailouts should not fall under the jurisdiction of the Treasury, and should remain confined to the jurisdiction of the central bank. Ailing banks should be treated on a case-by-case basis, and not in a systemic way. Solutions have to be addressed at each ailing bank level.

Recapitalization has always been the responsibility of shareholders. They have enjoyed profits during fat years. If they 

Continued 1 2  


Crisis control fit for the TV age
(Oct 3, '08)

Truth, lies and ticker tape
(Oct 2, '08)


1. Truth, lies and ticker tape

2. Gold, manipulation and domination

3. Crisis control fit for the TV age

4. Wolfowitz up to more mischief?

5. The $200 million house of bread

6. In life, or death, Baitullah's fight endures

7. Who pushed Medvedev?

8. China tangled up in red, white and blue

9. India aglow as nuclear pact approved

(24 hours to 11:59pm ET, Oct 2, 2008)

 
 


 

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