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Monday, September 29, 2008
Rich Galen :: Townhall.com Columnist
A Buy-In, Not a Bail-Out
by Rich Galen
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By the time you read this, the House might have already voted to pass the bill House Speaker Nancy Pelosi described as "not a bail-out, but a buy-in." The President will probably already have spoken and a good number of House Republicans will defied their leadership and voted against it.

I know a lot of MULLINGS readers are against this bill as well, and as you know I am not its biggest fan, but I think it is a must-do. To over-state the metaphor: If your boat is taking on water, and you are opposed, in ideological grounds, to bailing it out, it will sink and you will drown.

Let's forget about Merrill Lynch and Washington Mutual and Lehman Brothers. Let's look in, as the ad goes, YOUR wallet. What do you have in there; three credit cards? Four? Six? Come on. Come clean.

I will. I have two Amex cards - one for business use one for personal - a Visa ATM card and a MasterCard. Four. Which, according to an article in the San Jose Mercury News is the number the average American has in his or her wallet.

In fact, there are just short of a BILLION Visa, MasterCard and American Express cards in circulation in the US representing a total debt a little shy of a TRILLION dollars.

Ok. Enough of the data. Now to the point of all this.

Credit cards have been the fuel behind the extraordinary growth in the US economy which has been largely based upon consumer spending. Hold that thought.

Let's say the total debt of all of your credit cards is about $10,000 - which would put you just about at the average. Credit card companies generally require a minimum payment of about 4% of your balance on each card each month. $10,000 x .04 = $400. Each month.

With me so far?

Banks and other issuers have to have the funds to pay the merchant (less a fee) when you charge something. In order to do that, THEY have to borrow money. And they use your credit card debt is their collateral. Continued...

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About The Author

Rich Galen has been a press secretary to Dan Quayle and Newt Gingrich. Rich Galen currently works as a journalist and writes at Mullings.com

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MISSING THE POINT - BADLY
I have only seen a couple of posters here who seem to understand what the legislation would do. This is not a perfect bill, but a failure to restart the trading of mortgage-backed securities and their cousins will result in the credit markets truly seizing up. Our Congressmen can do their parts by stripping all provisions not directly related to the purchase of these securities from the bill.

Are there mortgages in this country that are in trouble? Yes. But the average morgage value has not dropped by 70% in the last six months and the vast majority are still performing. If Treasury starts buying these securities at 50 cents on the dollar the taxpayers will make a killing. This bill is not about giving free passes to people who fraudulenty took on mortgages they couldn't afford - it's about preventing a complete meltdown in our financial system that will affect every person posting on this site.

CRA
It was the creation of the CRA that made all of this possible in the first place. The demo's want you to believe that it was the bankers greed and mismanagement and I'm sure there was some of both but without the CRA it would not have been possible to be greedy or to mis-manage.
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