Wall Street Benefits Twice from Bailouts

Of course, most of these firms helped cause that very crisis.  Most of the companies bidding for government business are suffering big losses and preparing to unload lots of bad paper on the government.  Bad paper that other big companies with big losses and lots of bad paper will manage.  

And so the circle will go on endlessly, at taxpayer expense.


The only problem is potential conflicts of interest, since companies will, notes the Washington Post, “be managing the assets while also selling their own troubled securities to the government.”  But officials say they will attempt to “minimize” any conflict.  No doubt, Washington won’t let a little thing like ethics stand in the way of letting everyone on Wall Street profit.

Indeed, politics are starting even before the president’s signature on the bill is dry.  One analyst predicts that the Treasury Department will focus bailout funds on regional banks and thrifts, thereby providing “critical political support for Treasury’s efforts.”  After all, “Congressmen who had to swallow hard to vote for this think will feel a lot better about it if they see the impact in their local communities.”  Which is just another name for pork, like the spending programs and tax preferences loaded into the $700 billion bailout bill to win votes for passage.

All of this is politics as usual in Washington, and it won’t change whether Sen. Barack Obama or Sen. John McCain is elected president.  Both of them supported the $700 billion Wall Street bailout, as well as the many other bailouts that preceded it.  Both of them are part of the political establishment that helped create today’s economic problems. Neither of them will take the steps necessary to ensure that this sort of economic crisis doesn’t hit again.  Only Bob Barr and the Libertarian Party are offering the sort of fundamental change that the American people need and deserve.