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October 31, 2008
Housing bailout regrets
Washington Post columnist Steven Pearlstein has an interesting "I told you so" article on bailout regrets and the dangers of populist approaches to government intervention in financial markets.
Certainly there are situations in which capital injections are necessary. In Britain, for example, there are only a handful of banks that matter, and those had their capital so depleted that there was no choice but to pour money into them, on onerous terms and with lots of strings attached. And certainly, as with PNC's purchase of National City, a dose of government capital can grease the takeover of a weak bank that might have otherwise failed and required government intervention.But making modest investments in dozens of banks, whether they needed it or not, produces little for the public beyond the small profit for the Treasury. What it does do, however, is open the door for every politician and populist to second-guess every decision and expenditure the banks make, based on the false assumption that everything they do is with "our money."
Posted by samstaley at October 31, 2008 05:48 AM
Cato, Heritage, Club for Growth, the Competitive Enterprise Institute, NTU and others have joined forces at BeyondBailouts.org, a site designed to fight against further bailouts and to let Washington know how outraged the American people really are.
The Competitive Enterprise Institute and the National Taxpayers Union (you may remember McCain citing them during the debates) started BeyondBailouts.org and have since brought several other think tanks and advocacy groups on board as supporting partners. The site allows visitors to write their Congressman, sign a petition, and view syndicated news from several think tanks and advocacy groups.
It's a single site for all the best blogging on the bailout.
Comment by: Cord Blomquist at October 31, 2008 01:20 PM
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