Tag Archives: banks

Needed in Treasury Plan: Price-discovery, write-down, & taxpayer protection

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Some observations on the plan announced by Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner yesterday:

 

Clearly we need to hear more details.   sympathize with Geithner, who has only been in office a couple of weeks.    He has had to take over in the middle of the worst financial crisis in 77 years, at the same time that he must personally fill out the reams of forms that it takes to get confirmed by the Senate (like all such new appointees)  and to fill lots of positions throughout the upper levels of the Treasury.    But the American public will demand further elaboration  on his plan soon. read more

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An Emerging Consensus Against the Paulson Plan: Washington Should Force Bank Capital Up, Not Just Socialize the Bad Loans

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In time of war, there is a tendency for both political parties to rally around the president, as we saw (all too well) in Iraq after September 11.In time of financial panic, there is often a similar inclination.The two presidential candidates, for example, are being careful in their statements.I don’t blame them.The issues are too complex to be taken on inside the context of a political campaign.Both candidates realize that the danger of a verbal misstep that the other side can try to blame for worsening the crisis is far greater than the likelihood that either one will come up with a brilliant solution that will gain widespread support or will solve the problem, let alone both. read more

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Investment Banks, River Banks, and Moral Hazard

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Quite a few excellent economists are worried about moral hazard in financial markets.   Vince Reinhart wrote a Wall Street Journal column rebuking his former bosses after the Bear Stearns intervention: “…the Federal Reserve’s action can only be viewed as rewarding bad behavior.”  Ken Rogoff recently wrote in a Financial Times column, “it is important to be tougher in busts, so that investors and company executives have cause to pay serious attention to risks. If poorly run financial institutions are not allowed to close their doors during recessions, when exactly are they going to be allowed to fail?”    read more

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