The horizon is not so far as we can see, but as far as we can imagine

I’m Sure There’s a Difference Between the Bush/Paulson, Obama/Geithner Approaches to Bailouts

I’m just not sure what:

The Obama administration is engineering its new bailout initiatives in a way that it believes will allow firms benefiting from the programs to avoid restrictions imposed by Congress, including limits on lavish executive pay, according to government officials.

Administration officials have concluded that this approach is vital for persuading firms to participate in programs funded by the $700 billion financial rescue package.

The administration believes it can sidestep the rules because, in many cases, it has decided not to provide federal aid directly to financial companies, the sources said. Instead, the government has set up special entities that act as middlemen, channeling the bailout funds to the firms and, via this two-step process, stripping away the requirement that the restrictions be imposed, according to officials.

At this point in time, there seems to be no significant functional difference between Paulson/Bush and Geithner/Obama.  Both intended to give a ton of money to financial firms, either directly or by buying up crap at prices higher than justified.  Both opposed any meaningful restrictions on how they spent the money or who they gave it to.

Actually, I take it back, one difference is that when Paulson wanted 700 billion, he went to Congress.  When Geithner made up his plan he just had the FDIC and the FED pony up most of the money, because he knew Congress wouldn’t give him the money.

Some wonder if this is legal:

Although some experts are questioning the legality of this strategy, the officials said it gives them latitude to determine whether firms should be subject to the congressional restrictions, which would require recipients to turn over ownership stakes to the government, as well as curb executive pay.

Me, I don’t know if it’s legal.  What I do know is that they plan on giving money away in a manner which clearly intends to end-run Congress’s clearly legislated mandate for how it be given away.  What I know is that they are bypassing Congress when they can, because they know that the elected body which is the only one supposed to be able to pass spending bills wouldn’t give them all the money they want to spend and won’t let them spend what money it does give as freely as they want to.

Of course, that money will still have to be paid back by taxpayers, even if Congress never approved the spending.

But back to the TARP restrictions:

Congress drafted the restrictions amid its highly contentious consideration of the $700 billion rescue legislation last fall. At the time, lawmakers were aiming to reform the lavish pay practices on Wall Street. Congress also wanted the government to gain the right to buy stock in companies so that taxpayers would benefit if the firms recovered.

The requirements were honored in an initial program injecting public money directly into banks. That effort was developed by the Bush administration and continued by Obama’s team. The initiative is on track to account for the bulk of the money spent from the rescue package. All the major banks already submit to executive-compensation provisions and have surrendered ownership stakes as part of this program.

Yet as the Treasury has readied other programs, it has increasingly turned to creating the special entities. Legal experts said the Treasury’s plan to bypass the restrictions may be unlawful.

The problem is that while Geithner’s plan takes money from the FDIC and the Fed, it still uses some TARP money as seed money, and that money carries the restrictions.

I thought it wasn’t the executive’s job to decide that Congress is wrong and then deliberately end-run it.  I thought we had an election to stop this sort of thing.

This is one of the things we spent the last 8 years blasting Bush for doing. But in this particular case, the new administration is being less compliant with Congress’s will than the Bush administration was!

Less!

I don’t know whether to spit or cry.  I’ve always had my doubts about Obama, but in my worst dreams I didn’t think he’d try and end run Congress even more blatantly than Bush, in order to give even more money away to the richest Americans with even fewer restrictions and less protection from the taxpayer in terms of ownership stakes.

It’s going to be a long 4 years.

Previous

Devestatingly Bad Jobs Report

Next

Power and Gender

6 Comments

  1. Nope. Even I wasn’t cynical enough, and gawd knows I tried.

  2. senecal

    The admin feels it’s imperative to give this money to the banks, to clean up their balance sheets, and thinks that Congress won’t approve, so they are using the Fed and FDIC to do it. Everyone thinks it’s a failed policy, but all the western countries are doing it, and I’m not smart enough to know if they’re wrong. I do know that saving investors in the one case while squeezing labor in another, and cutting medicare later, shows who the administration really represents.

  3. John Merryman

    The irony here is that the pendulum will swing back. After thirty years of supply side economics, the rich have drained all the liquidity from the economy and unless if flows back in, in a big way, the process is going to seize up. Instead he is doing everything possible to keep the game going. Why? What can they give him? Money? Power? He is the one holding the aces, but he is folding. He certainly doesn’t seem stupid. They are not his crowd. Where is “The fierce urgency of now?” He got all the way to the top and now he is just buying into the network, but one that is crumbling.
    Maybe he has something up his sleeve, but the old saying comes to mind; You don’t get a second chance to make a first impression.

  4. jawbone

    Guess this answers my question asked re: your March 31st post on Next Time, Listen?

    Did you ever think Obama would be as disappointing as he has turned out to be?

  5. jawbone

    Uh oh– seems the end tag for the link take didn’t take– thought I had proofread… Hope this doesn’t mess up the thread! Sorry!

    Can you add Preview? And time-stamp? Thankew much.

  6. Ed

    This points up a problem in modern democracies which has me worried.

    First in New Zealand in the 1980s, then in the UK, then in the US voters threw out the ruling party and put in the opposition party, only to have the new government implement the exact same economic policies as the previous ruling party that had been thrown out. If you order beef, you get beef, and if you order chicken, you also get beef.

    I’m not sure what caused this, maybe some combination of bribery and blackmail of the politicians. The New Zealand voters short circuited the process by voting for various minor parties, and forcing through proportional representation. Maybe proportional representation is the answer. This process seems to have affected democracies that use it less. Though the US would have to switch to more of a parliamentary system first, the experience in Latin America and South Africa in combing proportional representation with presidentialism has not been positive.

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén