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October 1, 2008 at 16:06:11

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Promoted to Headline (H2) on 10/1/08:
Can A Bailout Succeed? Not without these elements and possibly not with them

by Paul Craig Roberts     Page 1 of 1 page(s)

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For the first time in recent memory Congress listened to the American people and blocked Paulson’s bailout of his rich buddies by US taxpayers. The same Congress that refuses the public’s demand that the Bush regime be held accountable and its gratuitous wars halted refused to hand over $700 billion to the financial institutions whose irresponsibility has brought the US to its worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.

We must be thankful for this sign that American democracy is not completely dead and supplanted by executive branch authority.  However, whatever bailout package that emerges will fail unless it takes into account the following.

Any package that maintains the mark-to-market rule and permits the resumption of short-selling will undermine itself. In panic conditions without the existence of a market, the mark-to-market rule results in asset prices being driven below their values, thus eroding balance sheets and producing insolvencies.  Short-selling permits short-sellers to profit by destroying the share prices of institutions suffering balance sheet problems, thus eliminating their ability to borrow and driving them into failure.  

A bailout, however large, that maintains the mark-to-market rule and permits short-selling will pour money into a black hole.

A bailout that is treated as a mere addition to the US government’s already massive indebtedness will disconcert foreign creditors.  There is a limit to the amount of debt for which the US Treasury can assume responsibility without undermining its own credit rating.  The bailout, especially if the $700 billion proves insufficient and more is needed, could impair the Treasury’s credit standing.

In this event, foreign creditors might not provide the funds needed for the bailout or would provide them only at higher interest rates, which would themselves undermine the bailout’s success.  

According to a September 29 report in the Washington Post: 

Twenty of the nation's largest financial institutions owned a combined total of $2.3 trillion in mortgages as of June 30. They owned another $1.2 trillion of mortgage-backed securities. And they reported selling another $1.2 trillion in mortgage-related investments on which they retained hundreds of billions of dollars in potential liability, according to filings the firms made with regulatory agencies. The numbers do not include investments derived from mortgages in more complicated ways, such as collateralized debt obligations.”

Leaving aside the collateralized debt obligations, adding the three mortgage-related instruments of the 20 financial institutions comes to $4.7 trillion of which $700 billion is 15 percent.  If more than 15% of just these troubled instruments are bad, the bailout would require more money.  At what point would foreign creditors see an endless pit?

If foreign creditors are to finance the bailout, it must be credible.  The best way to achieve credibility is to combine the bailout with a reduction in other forms of US foreign borrowing, specifically the US government’s budget deficit and the US trade deficit.

Based on assumptions that do not allow for recession and, perhaps, the full amount of the wars’ cost, the US budget deficit is estimated to be in excess of $400 billion.  Considering the urgency of the bailout, the $700 billion would also be near-term borrowing.  This means a minimum of $1.1 trillion in new US borrowing over the course of the year, a sum that could cause foreign creditors to blink.

The bailout would gain credibility if the US budget and trade deficits were addressed as part of the package.  The US government needs to choose between its financial system and its wars.  As the wars serve no US interest except for those of a few powerful interest groups, the government should declare an immediate end to the wars, thus reducing the budget deficit by at least $200 billion annually.

The government should then turn to the military budget, which at about $700 billion is larger than the combined military spending of the rest of the world combined.  The only justification for such an enormous amount of military spending is a policy of US world hegemony, a policy that financial collapse makes nonsensical.  The defense budget needs to be cut sufficiently to bring the US budget into balance or, better still, into $100 billion surplus.  

Such action would demonstrate to foreign creditors a responsible approach to the economic crisis.  Instead of more than doubling the demands for new credit from foreign creditors, the US government could keep the current level of borrowing constant by eliminating the budget deficit.  This would signal a new seriousness to foreign lenders.

The trade deficit also must be addressed.  The US is dependent on the willingness of foreigners to finance its annual consumption of $800 billion annually more than it produces.  This ongoing financing floods foreign creditors with dollar assets in such large quantities as to raise questions about the worth of the US dollar.  

The offshored production of goods and services for US markets has added significantly to the US trade deficit as these offshored goods and services count as imports when US corporations bring them to the US to be marketed.  Offshoring activity must be curtailed either with taxes, quotas, or tariffs.   It would be difficult to impose tariffs or quotas on goods made by companies of our foreign creditors.  But US firms that are producing offshore for US markets could be curtailed.   Eventually steps will have to be taken to bring the US trade deficit into balance, but this could await the end of the financial crisis.

Over the last 20 years the US has made a collection of serious mistakes that may yet prove fatal.  With the collapse of the Soviet Union, the US government launched a policy of world hegemony for which it lacked the means.  The US government permitted much of its manufacturing base to be located offshore to the point of even being dependent on imports for its military capability.  The US government deregulated the financial sector and permitted the rise of new highly leveraged financial instruments whose failures currently threaten the US with economic collapse.  

University of Maryland economist Herman E. Daly points out that the current crisis is really one of the “overgrowth of financial assets relative to growth of real wealth.”  Daly believes that “financial assets have grown by a large multiple of the real economy” and that “paper exchanging for paper is now 20 times greater than exchanges of paper for real commodities.” Exploding debt liens have simply outgrown the wealth.

The problem, in other words, cannot be bailed out.  Historically, debt that cannot be redeemed has been repealed by inflation.  The same inflation that wipes out debt will wipe out savings.

A failed bailout is the worst possible outcome.  The chance of failure rises if the US government tries to turn bad private debt into good public debt without regard to the expansion of the public debt.

 

Paul Craig Roberts, a former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury and former associate editor of the Wall Street Journal, has held numerous academic appointments. He has been reporting shocking cases of prosecutorial abuse for two decades. A new (more...)
 

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7 comments


Time frames

This "bailout" (aka "The Splurge") doesn't have to work in the LONG term.

It just has to work until November 5, 2008, so that the economy won't be an issue that John McCain has to deal with before the election.

It doesn't even have to REALLY work at all, it just has to RAISE THE DOW, as that is now, officially, "the economy" to most media people.  As long as the DJIA goes up between now and November 5, 2008, the splurge will have done all that any Rethuglican wants it to do.

And even then, there will be Rethuglican advertising that blames the Democrats in some way for passing the bailout.

by Charlie L (2 articles, 4 quicklinks, 1 diaries, 747 comments [2 recommended, 0 rejected]) on Thursday, Oct 2, 2008 at 1:53:49 AM

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Robbing the lifeboats won't save the Titanic.

Robbing the lifeboats won't save the Titanic.  Get ready for the big plunge and crooks calling in the cops.

by John Hanks (1 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 1760 comments [39 recommended, 0 rejected]) on Thursday, Oct 2, 2008 at 9:53:13 AM

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Another step by the Dominionists with another shock for us.

One of the tenants of PNAC is the remaking of the USA into a full fledged empire sans any democratic or Bill of Rights caused 'problems.' This is the first of a series of shocks to us in that transformation. For as one of their chief sages, Milton Friedman stated; the best way to make a new thing is to destroy the old. Whether by natural or human made disaster. This one is definitely of human construction. The shock can work both ways if we bring down the architecture that put us in this position in the first place and put instead one that is more attuned to our way of life and ethical considerations and economic benefit.

by nightgaunt (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 448 comments [27 recommended, 0 rejected]) on Thursday, Oct 2, 2008 at 12:47:17 PM

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Ending the war saves the economy

This article is absolutely to the point and we haven't been hearing this enough.  We have debt at three different levels- personal household debt, financial sector debt and public debt.  The first has swamped the second and now the second is being made to swamp the third.  The attitude of our leaders is to do nothing about the first level of debt and to pretend that the third level of debt doesn't matter at all.

The only possible way to avoid catastrophe, as this article points out, is to begin carefully and deliberately drawing down the public debt.  This in a way that protects average people so that their situations don't get any worse.  Ending the wars immediately is in fact our only hope to stay afloat.

This understanding of the importance of the Federal deficit is also a key point of convergence with anti-establishment conservatives and we should take full advantage of it for a working alliance.

by Doug Rogers (16 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 152 comments) on Thursday, Oct 2, 2008 at 12:49:49 PM

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thanks Mr. Roberts

for this illuminating analysis. Wall Street has proven the limitations of capitalism in rigged markets controlled by secretive and corrupt private interests. 

The Constitution authorizes Congress to coin money, the authority should never have been outsourced to the Fed, it's time to create a transparent monetary system that is owned and controlled by the people.

Level the playing field, make the economy and government serve the public interest, and the best ideas and hardest workers will rise to the top. The current system is rewarding the most corrupt and destructive, sucking on the human race like a cancer as the economy grows thanks to those who are actually creating value.

by Better World Order (4 articles, 568 quicklinks, 39 diaries, 1110 comments [56 recommended, 1 rejected]) on Thursday, Oct 2, 2008 at 1:12:51 PM

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This is Price-fixing and NOT just a bailout

There is a sense of panic that has been created by the media and public officials that will be responsible for withdrawals from commercial banks. Credit markets, like property markets, fluctuate based on changing conditions. Property values fluctuate based on the decline of neighborhoods, decreases in demand for home ownership, or interest rates change.

Look to the real world. Unemployment in the Great Depression was over 20% or more. Tight credit is NOT the same as a Depression. Is the prospect of people not being able to get a car loan such a catastrophe that we have to hand over 1 trillion dollars to the Secretary of the Treasury? Are cutting taxes more important than balancing the budget? Are lower home prices really something that we should have nightmares about?  Employers laying off workers because they cannot get credit is a recession, not a natural disaster. Can you say: “business cycle”?

The real protection needed for pensions and 401(k)s are not even on the table. At least this will withdraw currency from investment market that are bloated with cash now. It will also provide security for the individual accounts that are currently dependent on the stock market.

The Fed needs to raise interest rates and capital gains taxes need to be increased. Housing prices should not be fixed in an atmosphere of panic. “In 2004 Business Week Magazine and others criticized his keeping of low interest levels too long and his concurrent praise of sub-prime lending vehicles such as ARMs as leading to a housing bubble.” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Greenspan   nstead, there is a move from the Right to decrease corporate taxes and keep the currency flooding the economy.

FDIC guarantees were increased in the Senate bill. This will increase expenditures as well and is more intended for its mass psychological impact than for protection for depositors. A devalued dollar will make this protection irrelevant.

Even if the government intervenes and requires a minimum price for property there is no way it can presume that the selling prices will not fluctuate downward. Government guarantee of asset valuations does not circumvent the market prices of property. It merely steps in to take a loss that private investors or buyers are not willing to.

It is worth saying that it becomes a much more complex and veiled process open to new forms of price fixing and corruption. The effort to fix prices through this bailout will become an increasingly exercised option for the future because the real goal is to perpetuate prosperity and avoid any market valuation of assets. The bailout will not avoid recession. It will only increase the amount required for the government to pump prime the economy. This is not socialism by any definition though. It IS price-fixing of property and is bound to failure.

by Matoska (22 articles, 1 quicklinks, 1 diaries, 33 comments) on Thursday, Oct 2, 2008 at 3:42:42 PM

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Regulation is a form of risk management

Everybody drives on the one side of the road, not as an infringement on your personal liberty but because you have less accidents that way.

Regulation can be good for you.

by kwalsh (4 articles, 0 quicklinks, 7 diaries, 275 comments [10 recommended, 0 rejected]) on Sunday, Oct 5, 2008 at 6:59:21 PM

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