Monday, November 23, 2009

Monkey Business, Krugman: The Big Squander - Connect the Dots

* Early birds: This morning's Connect the Dots (7am, 90.7fm) goes into
the health-care bill, Afghanistan, and more. Details at the bottom -Ed


Once upon a time a man appeared in a village and announced
to the villagers that he would buy monkeys for $10 each.

The villagers, seeing that there were many monkeys around,
went out to the forest and started catching them.

The man bought thousands at $10 and, as supply started to
diminish, the villagers stopped their effort. He next announced
that he would now buy monkeys at $20 each. This renewed the
efforts of the villagers and they started catching monkeys again.

Soon the supply diminished even further and people started going
back to their farms. The offer increased to $25 each and the supply
of monkeys became so scarce it was an effort to even find a monkey,
let alone catch it!

The man now announced that he would buy monkeys at $50 each!
However, since he had to go to the city on some business, his
trustworthy assistant would buy on his behalf. In his absence, the
assistant told the villagers: "Look at all these monkeys in the big cage
that the man has already collected. I will sell them to you at $35 and
when the man returns from the city, you can sell them to him for $50
each."

The villagers rounded up all their savings and bought all the monkeys
for 700 billion dollars. They never saw the man or his assistant again,
but they had lots and lots of monkeys!

Now you have a much better understanding of how the GOVERNMENT
BAILOUT PLAN IS WORKING !!!! It doesn't get much clearer than this ...

***

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/20/opinion/20krugman.html?th&emc=th

The Big Squander

"So here's the real tragedy of the botched bailout: Government officials,
perhaps influenced by spending too much time with bankers, forgot that if
you want to govern effectively you have retain the trust of the people. And
by treating the financial industry - which got us into this mess in the
first place - with kid gloves, they have squandered that trust."

By PAUL KRUGMAN
NY Times Op-Ed: November 19, 2009

Earlier this week, the inspector general for the Troubled Asset Relief
Program, a k a, the bank bailout fund, released his report on the 2008
rescue of the American International Group, the insurer. The gist of the
report is that government officials made no serious attempt to extract
concessions from bankers, even though these bankers received huge benefits
from the rescue. And more than money was lost. By making what was in effect
a multibillion-dollar gift to Wall Street, policy makers undermined their
own credibility - and put the broader economy at risk.

For the A.I.G. rescue was part of a pattern: Throughout the financial crisis
key officials - most notably Timothy Geithner, who was president of the New
York Fed in 2008 and is now Treasury secretary - have shied away from doing
anything that might rattle Wall Street. And the bitter paradox is that this
play-it-safe approach has ended up undermining prospects for economic
recovery. For the job of fixing the broken economy is far from done - yet
finishing the job has become nearly impossible now that the public has lost
faith in the government's efforts, viewing them as little more than handouts
to the people who got us into this mess.

About the A.I.G. affair: During the bubble years, many financial companies
created the illusion of financial soundness by buying credit-default swaps
from A.I.G. - basically, insurance policies in which A.I.G. promised to make
up the difference if borrowers defaulted on their debts. It was an illusion
because the insurer didn't have remotely enough money to make good on its
promises if things went bad. And sure enough, things went bad.

So why protect bankers from the consequences of their errors? Well, by the
time A.I.G.'s hollowness became apparent, the world financial system was on
the edge of collapse and officials judged - probably correctly - that
letting A.I.G. go bankrupt would push the financial system over that edge.
So A.I.G. was effectively nationalized; its promises became taxpayer
liabilities.

But was there any way to limit those liabilities? After all, banks would
have suffered huge losses if A.I.G. had been allowed to fail. So it seemed
only fair for them to bear part of the cost of the bailout, which they could
have done by accepting a "haircut" on the amounts A.I.G. owed them. Indeed,
the government asked them to do just that. But they said no - and that was
the end of the story. Taxpayers not only ended up honoring foolish promises
made by other people, they ended up doing so at 100 cents on the dollar.

Could things have been different? Some commentators argue that government
officials had no way to force the banks to accept a haircut - either they
let A.I.G. go bankrupt, which they weren't ready to do, or they had to honor
its contracts as written.

But this seems like a naïve view of how Wall Street works. Major financial
firms are a small club, with a shared interest in sustaining the system;
ever since the days of J.P. Morgan, it has been common in times of crisis to
call on the big players to forgo short-term profits for the industry's
common good. Back in 1998, it was a consortium of private bankers - not the
government - that put up the funds to rescue the hedge fund Long Term
Capital Management.

Furthermore, big financial firms have a long-term relationship, both with
the government and with each other, and can pay a price if they act
selfishly in times of crisis. Bear Stearns, the investment bank, earned
itself a lot of ill will by refusing to participate in that 1998 rescue, and
it's widely believed that this ill will played a major factor in the demise
of Bear Stearns itself, 10 years later.

So officials could have called on bankers to offer a better deal, for their
own sake, and simultaneously threatened to name and shame those who balked.
It was their choice not to do that, just as it was their choice not to push
for more control over bailed-out banks in early 2009.

And, as I said, these seemingly safe choices have now placed the economy in
grave danger.

For the economy is still in deep trouble and needs much more government
help. Unemployment is in double-digits; we desperately need more government
spending on job creation. Banks are still weak, and credit is still tight;
we desperately need more government aid to the financial sector. But try to
talk to an ordinary voter about this, and the response you're likely to get
is: "No way. All they'll do is hand out more money to Wall Street."

So here's the real tragedy of the botched bailout: Government officials,
perhaps influenced by spending too much time with bankers, forgot that if
you want to govern effectively you have retain the trust of the people. And
by treating the financial industry - which got us into this mess in the
first place - with kid gloves, they have squandered that trust.

***

From: Lila Garrett Lgartt@aol.com
Subject: CONNECT THE DOTS, ON KPFK fm MON. 7 TO 8 AM

Monday morning at 7 on CONNECT THE DOTS, 907 FM or log on any time using
this link: http://archive.kpfk.org/parchive/index.php?shokey=ctd

Congressman Dennis Kucinich tells us what happened to his amendment to allow
States to select Single Payer Healthcare no matter what plan the Congress
comes up with. The Kucinich Amendment was passed by the House but did not
appear in the final bill. The Whitehouse stopped it. We ask, for what
reason? And with such hobbled Healthcare bills coming from both the House
and Senate how do we get to Single Payer from here?

What about Afghanistan? More troops? No troops? Something in between? The
President is holding the world in suspense waiting for his decision.
Meanwhile, what's in store for our people and theirs in that ravaged
country? Former head UN weapons Inspector Scott Ritter joins us for that
discussion and the launching of "theveteransproject.org"...a new, much
needed program.

And David Swanson previews his new book Daybreak. How much "change" has
Obama, the Prophet of change, delivered? What does the future hold? Should
our 200 year old Constitution be rewritten? Think big! Do we actually need
a Senate or a Supreme Court? Swanson, a consummate political analyst ,also
appears in person tomorrow night (Monday Nov. 23rd) at St. Bede's Church
3590 Grandview in Marr Vista. The evening is moderated by Marcy Winograd
and myself. Join us, Monday morning at 7AM on CONNECT THE DOTS....and
Monday night at St. Bede's.

Lila Garrett (Host of CONNECT THE DOTS)
KPFK 90.7 FM in LA; 98.7 Santa Barbara
Airs Mondays from 7AM to 8AM.
To pod cast or download the broadcast just use this link:
http://archive.kpfk.org/parchive/index.php?shokey=ctd
Each show is on line for three months.

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