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Why Paulson’s plan is a fraud

  1. thewandering
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Is the Paulson bailout itself as big a fraud as the leveraged subprime mortgages?

Yesterday, here on CounterPunch, I discussed the bailout as proposed and noted that the proposal cannot succeed if it impairs the US Treasury’s credit standing and/or the combination of mark-to-market and short-selling permits short-sellers to prosper by driving more financial institutions into bankruptcy.

A reader’s comment and an article by Yale professors Jonathan Kopell and William Goetzmann raise precisely this question of the fraudulence of the Paulson package.

As one reader put it,“We have debt at three different levels: personal household debt, financial sector debt and public debt. The first has swamped the second and now the second is being made to swamp the third. The attitude of our leaders is to do nothing about the first level of debt and to pretend that the third level of debt doesn’t matter at all.”

The argument for the bailout is that the banks will be free of the troubled instruments and can resume lending and that the US Treasury will recover most of the bailout costs, because only a small percentage of the underlying mortgages are bad. Let’s examine this argument.

In actual fact, the Paulson bailout does not address the core problem. It only addresses the problem for the financial institutions that hold the troubled assets. Under the bailout plan, the troubled assets move from the banks’ books to the Treasury’s. But the underlying problem–the continuing diminishment of mortgage and home values–remains and continues to worsen.

The origin of the crisis is at the homeowner level. Homeowners are defaulting on mortgages. Moving the financial instruments onto the Treasury’s books does not stop the rising default rate.

The bailout is focused on the wrong end of the problem. The bailout should be focused on the origin of the problem, the defaulting homeowners. The bailout should indemnify defaulting homeowners and pay off the delinquent mortgages. As Koppell and Goetzmann point out, the financial instruments are troubled because of mortgage defaults. Stopping the problem at its origin would restore the value of the mortgage-based derivatives and put an end to the crisis.

This approach has the further advantage of stopping the slide in housing prices and ending the erosion of local tax bases that result from foreclosures and houses being dumped on the market. What about the moral hazard of bailing out homeowners who over-leveraged themselves? Ask yourself: How does it differ from the moral hazard of bailing out the financial institutions that securitized questionable loans, insured them, and sold them as investment grade securities? Congress should focus the bailout on refinancing the troubled mortgages as the Home Owners’ Loan Corp. did in the 1930s, not on the troubled institutions holding the troubled instruments linked to the mortgages. Congress needs to back off, hold hearings, and talk with Koppell and Goetzmann.Congress must know the facts prior to taking action. The last thing Congress needs to do is to be panicked again into agreeing to a disastrous course.
Truth Rising
thewandering

9 responses // Why Paulson’s plan is a fraud

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    Of course it's a fraud, now tell me something I don't know! Bush and Co. and every one of his minions is a fraud we all know that. It is only a crime that so many young and innocent people have died for the rotten fraud. Bush is a very evil person and like attracts like, a man is known by the company he keeps.

    Robroy1
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    I like to hope that everything can be treated retroactively if need be.

    damnneargenius
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    Stop making sense before they catch you
    Of course this was a giant excuse for W to get a good bye gift

    But I like this

    NeoDotCom
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    after all the exposed lies, why should any of us believe anything that this guy wants us to believe? as if, he had a change of heart overnight. or should i say, WE had a change of heart overnight.

    pressrecord
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    The criminals who sold the bundled package of bad securities with the good and caused this mortgage mess need to be arrested and their assets seized before they go to trial.

    Leave everyone else out of it.

    Oh, I forgot, the borrower is servant to the lender which means we can not get money from the investors who bought the bundled- bad and good mortgages to pay the government payroll which includes, hello....the congress, president...need I go on.

    resolute
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    What a bunch of cocksuckers.

    damnneargenius
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    if I say what I truly feel - something to the tune of how I wish that someone would _ill W, #43 [missing character the capital letter that resides in between the standard set of our alphabet between J & L] - I'd likely get a "warning" from a staff member and have my "comment" deleted.. .

    wiredbirds
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    Image...

    ChristmasAsen

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