Townhall.com, Where Your Opinion Counts
Talk Radio:   Bill Bennett   Mike Gallagher   Dennis Prager   Michael Medved   Hugh Hewitt   
BREAKING NEWS  LeftArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican   RightArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican  
Columns, funnies & more in your inbox!
  • Check the boxes and send us your email address to receveive your free newsletter
  • Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
  • Townhall.com’s weekly inside scoop on what’s happening behind the scenes in the world of politics. When news breaks, we report.
  • Signup to receive the latest daily Townhall cartoons

Townhall.com The Blogspot for Political, Conservative and Republican Blogs and Bloggers


Friday, October 03, 2008
IBD Editorial: Plan Will Save Free Market, Not Destroy It
Posted by: John Campbell at 9:32 AM

Below you will find an editorial I penned for Investor's Business Daily today.

Investor's Business Daily

Plan Will Save Free Market, Not Destroy It

By REP. JOHN CAMPBELL

This free-market, Milton Friedman devotee, conservative Republican congressman will be voting strongly in favor of the $700 billion bailout for Wall Street. What, you ask? Has the California sun fried my last brain cell?

No. I will vote for this bill because it will likely not cost anything, is not a bailout of anybody and will help every American with a bank account, a job or a retirement plan. It also will save the free market, not weaken it.

Allow me to explain.

The $700 billion figure so often mentioned will not be spent, but actually entirely invested with three different mechanisms to ensure that the taxpayers get all their money back.

First, these "troubled assets" will be purchased at less than the expected net present value of their cash flow. That means taxpayers should make a profit by holding them to maturity.

Second, taxpayers will get warrants to purchase stock in the companies from whom these assets are bought. That is more profit potential if the companies recover.

Third, whoever is president five years from now is required to offer to Congress a proposal to recover from these same companies any net loss incurred by the taxpayers to that point. No investment's return is certain, but this one looks pretty good. It for sure will not cost anything close to $700 billion over time.

Furthermore, you are not bailing out companies when you buy assets from them at 30%-60% of what they paid for the asset. That's a bath, not a bailout.

And they should take a bath. They made an investment decision, and it turned out to be a bad one, so they lose money. The purpose of the purchase plan is to create a market where one does not now exist and allow these companies to move that capital back into productive use in the economy. It is not giving them any kind of deal.

If this bill does not pass and Congress does nothing, Wall Street will suffer for sure. But so will everyone with a retirement plan as those values drop precipitously and their nest egg disappears.

Just imagine a whole week of days like Monday. People with bank accounts or money market funds may find their money inaccessible as the debt markets freeze over. And nonfinancial businesses that rely on short-term borrowing to meet payrolls and finance inventory spikes may be unable to get that credit, resulting in layoffs. In short, we all lose, whether we live in Manhattan or Peoria.

So has the free market failed us and that's why we need the government to take it over in this way?

No again. Free markets work. They are still working. They are rational. But on both sides of any free market transaction are two human beings who are subject to emotional behavior. The market cannot correct for overwhelmingly irrational behavior, whether that behavior is fear and panic or risk-ignoring exuberance.

When the short-term debt of some of the world's most profitable companies has no buyers, that is evidence of widespread fear bordering on panic. The objective of this bill is to remove the object of that fear, the bad mortgage-backed securities, from the market so that rational behavior will return.

In some ways, this bill is more of a free-market solution than other actions that have been taken. The government will not take over any companies here. Even the warrants will be nonvoting. No one will be compelled to sell the government their assets if they don't want to.

Even the "reverse auction" process of establishing pricing for the assets, where sellers submit bids to one buyer rather than the other way around, is a market-based pricing method.

Other ideas are out there to correct this problem. I have seen most of them. None has a better chance than this one to stabilize the credit and equity markets. Furthermore, no other plan has the broad base of political support that this plan has from leaders in both parties.

The credit markets in particular are too fragile. We cannot afford the time delay of starting over.

If we do not pass anything, I shudder to think of how bad things might get as that fear turns to full-fledged panic.

If we pass this plan, some banks and other companies will still fail. The world economy will still struggle and have problems for months if not years to come.

But markets will function again, and we will likely avoid the abyss. That will save our free-market economy, not jeopardize it. I hope and pray that at least 217 of my colleagues in the House of Representatives will see it that way on Friday.

Campbell represents California's 48th congressional district, which includes much of Orange County.





Your Blog Postings:
Last updated 16 Minutes 5 Seconds Ago
Last updated 41 Minutes 10 Seconds Ago
Last updated 41 Minutes 27 Seconds Ago
Last updated 41 Minutes 42 Seconds Ago
Last updated 42 Minutes 7 Seconds Ago
 

Archives of our Conservative, Republican, Political Blogs

Blog Search



Townhall Conservative, Republican, Political Blogs Townhall Blogs
Townhall Conservative, Republican, Political Columns Columns
Your Townhall Conservative, Republican, Political Blogs Your Blogs
By Month
 November 2009
 October 2009
 September 2009
 August 2009
 July 2009
 June 2009
 May 2009
 April 2009
 March 2009
 February 2009
 January 2009
 December 2008
 November 2008
 October 2008
 September 2008
 August 2008
 July 2008
 June 2008
By Issue
 A Culture of Life
 Budget & Government
 Campaigns & Elections
 Education
 Energy & Environment
 Faith & Family
 Foreign Affairs
 Health Care
 Immigration
 Jobs & Economy
 Judges & Courts
 Media & Culture
 Property Rights
 Safety & Security
 Science & Technology
 Second Amendment
 Social Security
 Tax Relief
Advertisement

Comments Comments

NOTW 8:13 PM
 Re: Bush: "I Went Against My Free-Market Instincts"; Beware of This "Temptation"
  By Bob Munck
I wonder...
 Re: Shouldn't It Be 14 Counts?
  By Meredith
Meredith,
 Re: Shouldn't It Be 14 Counts?
  By Tazzmax
"sceptyczny" is "kaboom"
 Re: Shouldn't It Be 14 Counts?
  By cottoneyed
shot
 Re: Big John Gets the H1N1 Vaccination
  By LaVerne
twomay
 Re: Re: Beck Has No Sympathy for Carrie Prejean
  By Crispian
Yeah,
 Re: Shouldn't It Be 14 Counts?
  By Tazzmax
Baradiel
 Re: Shouldn't It Be 14 Counts?
  By NOTW
Dhimmis and sky pixies,
 Re: Shouldn't It Be 14 Counts?
  By cottoneyed
Axeman
 Re: Shouldn't It Be 14 Counts?
  By NOTW
Munck
 Re: Shouldn't It Be 14 Counts?
  By NOTW
Careful Nazi
 Re: Shouldn't It Be 14 Counts?
  By Baradiel
Scept, and Baradull
 Re: Shouldn't It Be 14 Counts?
  By Careful with that axe, Eugene
Munck?
 Re: Bush: "I Went Against My Free-Market Instincts"; Beware of This "Temptation"
  By NOTW
"Obama and his cronies don't view"
 Re: Shouldn't It Be 14 Counts?
  By moderateGuy
David
 Re: Prejean Slams Olbermann, Says Liberal Media "Palinized" Her & Talks About The "Sex Tape"
  By Careful with that axe, Eugene
Crispian
 Re: Re: Beck Has No Sympathy for Carrie Prejean
  By twomay
sceptyczny
 Re: Shouldn't It Be 14 Counts?
  By Baradiel
You know Bambooddle has a problem
 Re: TX Governor: Obama Taking US Toward Socialism
  By moderateGuy
Baradull
 Re: Bush: "I Went Against My Free-Market Instincts"; Beware of This "Temptation"
  By Careful with that axe, Eugene

The Latest on Town HallThe Latest on Town Hall


Blog Roll Blog Roll