Economists, House Republicans led by Minority Leader John Boehner (R-OH)
and millions of Americans across the country are questioning the
prudence of the Federal Government's bailout of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac
and AIG. The bailout package has taken so much criticism that neither
of the two Presidential candidates is willing to endorse it outright.
You also can add my name to the list of those concerned.
The cost to the American taxpayer, we're told, is to be $700 billion,
though it probably will be closer to a full $1 trillion, and all must be
done without delay. Why the rush? Where are the compelling economic
arguments that if we don't act immediately to save these companies this
nation will suffer financial Armageddon in short order? Senator Joseph
R. (Joe) Biden, Jr. (D-DE) has suggested that we Americans should be
patriotic in paying our taxes. Are we to be patriotic in order to come
to the financial aid of a multi-trillion dollar corporate world, one
which consistently espouses a free-market economy? Neither President
George W. Bush nor his Treasury Secretary, Henry Paulson nor the
Congressional Leadership has come through with any clear-cut reasoning
regarding what the effects would be if we did not act quickly or what
the American people would gain if we do. And as various economists are
claiming, this incredibly enormous bailout never would address the
actual problems that got us into this mess, nor would it give any
protection to the taxpayer who must foot the entire bill.
What's more, we now understand that several of the key players behind
this government bailout have extensive ties to many of the corporate
giants they want to rescue. Senator Christopher J. (Chris) Dodd (D-CT),
Chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, has received more than $7.8
million since 2003 from financial, insurance and real estate
corporations, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.
Representative Barney Frank (D-MA), Chairman of the Financial Services
Committee, has received approximately $600,000 in the last five years.
The two are part of a four-man negotiating committee (the other two are
Republicans) whose job it is to iron out a bailout compromise
settlement. These two men consistently have voted in favor of their
corporate constituencies. Whose best interests do you think are
represented at the negotiating table - the public's or those of the
corporate world?
Corruption and bad judgment persist in both the corporate and political
worlds. When in June Senate leaders agreed to a bipartisan bill to
establish a $300 billion rescue fund for troubled mortgages and a new
regulator for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, nothing changed in banking
practices. Banks continued to extend mortgages to those who could not
afford them, which is what caused the problem in the first place, as did
Washington Mutual (WaMu), which finally was seized last week by the
Federal Government and sold to JP Morgan-Chase. And WaMu's latest CEO,
Alan Fishman, who was on the job for about a month, is walking away with
a severance package worth an estimated $18 million - the stockholders
and general public be damned! But at least WaMu was not bailed out by
the taxpayer. Yet, unless bad banking practices are addressed through a
return to strong regulation, nothing will change. Banks will continue
to close, home foreclosures will persist, and we will see a further
erosion of property values.
I have pondered certain questions regarding the stock market: What
constitutes the real value of a Wall Street company which is doing
fairly well? Is it part assets and profits, and part psychology brought
on by Wall Street marketing? What is it that really drives the market
and thus the value of a corporation? Should the price of a stock be $68
per share, $48 or only $2 per share? So regarding this bailout, one
question centers upon the real value of these corporate giants; another
concerns an alternative approach to a bailout, such as a merger or a
government loan with interest. As some economists argue, contrary to
Wall Street types, when all is said and done, if there is no bailout of
these companies, the overall solid assets still will be there and the
buildings and equipment will as well. Of course, positive cash flow has
dried up, but that does not mean that corporations like these cannot
return to sound business and banking practices (neglected for so long
while in several cases the books were cooked), and get their companies
back onto solid financial footing.
I am not rejecting a bailout or rescue plan of some nature but let's
first think good and hard about the repercussions. Are we in the
process of nationalizing the economy and moving toward a socialistic
state; will this $1 trillion save the nation or will it actually drive
America ever closer to financial insolvency through massive
accumulations of outstanding debt; and is the American taxpayer expected
through "patriotism" to foot the cost of huge corporate failures?
Sorry, but I'm not buying this rush to bail out Wall Street until I see
some clear answers.
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