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Commentary: Scare 'em rigid ... and boost McCain vote

Anthony Hilton
25 Sep 2008


President George Bush seems to have woken up to the fact that there is a crisis in the financial markets which threatens if it runs unchecked to do serious damage to the US economy. In American parlance the good citizens on Main Street could end up paying for the excesses of the citizens of Wall Street - not just through their taxes but through unemployment, bankruptcies slower growth and even the outside possibility of a Thirties-style depression.

The language in his nationwide broadcast last night was apocalyptic but he is a politician if nothing else. A few days ago his Treasury Secretary, Hank Paulson, revealed a plan under which the US government would spend $800 billion buying sub-prime mortgages and the like from the nation's banks. The theory is that if you give the banks hard cash for duff assets it will restore them to health and allow them to start behaving like sensible banks again, providing credit to the nation's enterprises and helping them to grow. That would mark the end of the crisis - albeit at the cost of leaving the taxpayer with $800 billion of dubious assets.

Bush's problem is that the plan has run into opposition in Congress. His appeal to the nation was to get the people on his side so not only would they accept that the colossal sum of $800 billion would indeed have to be spent, but also that they would tell their Congressmen in no uncertain fashion that is what they want. It was a manoeuvre to help him to draw the sting from the opposition. He needs to do this for both economic and political reasons. It is not just the economy that is suffering. It will not have escaped his notice that each day this crisis runs, the more it damages the chances of a Republican win in the November elections. It is important that he be seen to be doing something and what better way to get the people behind him, than by scaring them rigid? It worked in the wake of 9/11 after all.

But the Bush version of Apocalypse Now ignores that the plan has two kinds of opponent. In one camp are the mainly Republican diehards who believe it is wrong in principle to use public money to bail out the private sector, however bad the consequences for innocent bystanders in letting the banks go to the wall. These people might be swayed by a voter backlash. The second camp is different. It accepts a taxpayer-funded rescue is necessary but does not think this Paulson plan is the best way to go about it.

There is indeed an inconsistency at the plan's heart. The banks' problem is that no one knows what these poor-quality assets are worth. So how much does the Treasury pay for them? If the price is rock bottom, it will be too low to help the banks and they will go bust anyway. If the price is too high it gets the banks right off the hook but it dumps all the rubbish and losses in the lap of the taxpayer.

The favoured alternative plan - so far resisted by Paulson - is to leave the assets where they are but for that $800 billion, or an equivalent sum, to be injected into the banks as new equity. This injection of capital would help by giving people confidence in the ability of banks to withstand the losses while giving the taxpayer a stake in the upside as the banks returned to health.

What actually happens will no doubt be thrashed out over the next few days, and that at bottom is probably what the President wants. He probably does not care much how the rescue is structured provided it works. That goes for the rest of us too. You don't have to share the Bush vision of a return to the Thirties to believe that these are difficult times. But while a downturn is inevitable, a disaster certainly is not.

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George Herbert Walker IV, a second cousin of the President, is a managing director at Lehman Brothers. Jeb Bush is an “advisor” in Lehman’s private equity group. William T. Bush, the President’s uncle, was on the board at Engineered Support Systems, a defense contractor which made hundreds of millions of dollars from the Iraq, Afghanastan wars. The Carlyle Group with which the Bush family was connected, did defense contracting. Shouldn’t the MSM report extensively on this?

- Jewel Mathias, Paducah(KY.) U.S.A., 26/09/2008 00:26
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Bailing out mortgage-stricken banks? Well ... we may have to.

Writing President Bush a blank cheque for 700 billion dollar because he says "We know what we're doing. Trust us."? That would be stupid. The last time Americans wrote this man a blank cheque he gave them Iraq.

Let Paulson specify what he needs, and lets mandate congressional approval for each tranche of, say, 100 billion dollars.

- Golodh, London, UK, 25/09/2008 15:53
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