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Yes on bailout, but the debt monster lives


Examiner Editorial
September 28, 2008

- — Negotiators working overtime through the weekend agreed on a compromise Wall Street bailout. It should be approved by Congress and signed by the President as soon as possible. Fundamental problems remain with key aspects of the bailout but sufficient improvements were incorporated to justify passage, especially given the critical need to unfreeze credit markets. Failing to enact the bailout risks a major plunge in the stock market, more bank failures and undermining future economic growth. That said, the $700 billion bail-out is only a short-term fix. It avoids assessing the regulatory failures and shady private sector actions that contributed to the immediate crisis, and it does nothing about the root causes of the economic crisis. Looming over it all are the enormous difficulties that will come if we are to free the nation from the grip of the debt monster upon which we have made ourselves dependent.

The root cause of the present crisis is the federal government's insistence beginning with passage of the 1977 Community Reinvestment Act that private sector lenders loosen their credit rules in order to give mortgages to buyers who could not repay them. Then in the 1990s and thereafter, an ill-advised government policy was transformed into a financial toxin as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac used their status as government-backed corporations to backstop millions of such sub-prime loans and to encourage their  packaging in mortgage-backed securities as investment tools. Wall Street knew better than to build on such an economic house-of-cards, but did it anyway. The bottom-line remains that well-intentioned but ill-advised government policies are at the heart of the immediate economic crisis.

But it is the debt monster that is by far the more serious long-term financial obstacle we face. The government doesn't have $700 billion to pay for the bailout, so it will borrow the money instead of printing cheap but highly inflationary money. The nation's national debt already approaches $10 trillion, including approximately $500 billion each to China and Japan. Add to those totals the $300 billion economic "stimulus" package passed earlier this year and now the $700 billion bailout. If those numbers seem daunting, consider this: The federal government owes more than $40 trillion more in entitlement benefits than it can realistically expect to receive in taxes in coming years. This shortfall hits with a vengeance beginning in 2011 when the first ranks of the Baby Boomers start drawing Social Security. Without hiking taxes to ruinous levels or slashing benefits millions of Americans are counting on, Washington must stop spending hundreds of billions of dollars and start paying down its debt. The ancient proverb – the debtor is slave to the lender – is as brutally true today as it was when Solomon first wrote it.



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

elHombre

Sep 29, 2008

It is characteristic of the deep-seated, systemic corruption in Congress that Barney Frank and his fellow Democrat panderers for Fannie and Freddie have not been called out by Republicans. It is also characteristic of the diminution in the ethics and integrity of the mainstream news media that they are apparently more interested in supporting Democrats than in seeing them held accountable for the sacking of Fannie and Freddie -- even if it means leaving the foxes in charge of the henhouse.

 

canditaylor68

Sep 29, 2008

I say let them all fall. As the Asian and world banks begin to react and the stockmarket crashes, the books will be thrown wide open, and the world will finally know who to blame-the Democrats who passed this into its original beginning and the regulators who 3 years ago tried to fix this and were called racists by Frank and his group. There are videos running around that tracks this-find them and show people.This is the finest example of how Pelosi lied and said she was ready to pass the bill on the day McCain came to rally repub support.She is a blatant liar, so is Frank and they need to step down. Ninety seven democrats voted AGAINST THIS bill. The truth is always the truth and a lie is always a lie, now its a fact for the history books!

 

A Stoner

Sep 29, 2008

More people need to watch this video before they decide whether wall street needs to be bailed out, or if congress should be sent home, permanantly. Burning Down the House on youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H5tZc8oH—o

 

Tom

Sep 29, 2008

Any bailout plan that DOES NOT REPEAL the CRA is DOOMED to allow the same loaning of money to people who WILL NOT PAY it back, and continue to allow the mortgage companies to do this expecting the bailout from the new entity or the existing Fan/Fred. It MUST repeal CRA. It can keep a provision to restructure mortgages to give some people a chance to stay in their homes. CRA MUST be GONE. By the way, Obama was a lawyer working for ACORN to force Citibank to make bad loans. He is part of the problem. The MSM is not vetting Obama. He gets more money from Fan/Fred than anybody.

 

Harry Schell

Sep 29, 2008

First, repeal the CRA and establish economics as the criteria to lending. Second, loan money to banks so they can continue with business, stay solvent. Loans have to be repurchased at some due date. Third, use the existing "workout" departments in banks to sort out the failed loans and deal with the asset sales, etc. DO NOT create a government monster to deal with this part of the equation. Fourth, investigate the relations of Fannie/Freddie and Congress, and why Barney Frank, Chuck Schumer and Chris Dodd, not to mention Paulso et. al, were "surprised" by this mess. After all, Dems have had a majority since 06 and not a peep has come out, and Frank et, al. repeatedly rebuffed calls for reform at Fannie/Freddie. This investigation should be an impeachment action of the related pols on the basis of gross failure of their fiduciary duty to the US Taxpayer.

 

TUCJLT

Sep 29, 2008

I don't know how others feel, but what the federal government has done since 1977 is incompetent, foolish and despicable beyond measure! Right now, it is imperative to "stop the bleeding" so that our financial institutions can continue business. We may not be able to pass a package that appeases both major political parties, but it is vital to construct legislation that begins moving in the right direction. From there, I would suggest open Congressional hearings to identify ALL culprits and then further legislation to prevent future collapses of the markets. The problem, however, does not just reside in complicated economics - it lives within partisan politics that threaten the vibrancy of our posterity. Until Congress "humbles itself" before the American people and acts in the best interests of the nation, constructive legislation may be be extremely difficult to realize. Perhaps a few "Congressional heads" need to roll in order to advance progress!

 

TUCJLT

Sep 29, 2008

I don't know how others feel, but what the federal government has done since 1977 is incompetent, foolish and despicable beyond measure! Right now, it is imperative to "stop the bleeding" so that our financial institutions can continue business. We may not be able to pass a package that appeases both major political parties, but it is vital to construct legislation that begins moving in the right direction. From there, I would suggest open Congressional hearings to identify ALL culprits and then further legislation to prevent future collapses of the markets. The problem, however, does not just reside in complicated economics - it lives within partisan politics that threaten the vibrancy of our posterity. Until Congress "humbles itself" before the American people and acts in the best interests of the nation, constructive legislation may be be extremely difficult to realize. Perhaps a few "Congressional heads" need to roll in order to advance progress!

 

JerryF

Sep 29, 2008

Yes, why aren't we seeing the legislative 'contributions' of Frank and Dodd publicized, along with the campaign $$$ they have received from the financial institutions. The media is selling this as a failure of free markets, when it is a failure of government regulations.

 


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