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Update on the bail out

by Jessica Hays last modified September-30-2008 09:25 AM
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The $700 billion bailout failed in today's House vote.  Some of the dissent came from Democratic representatives who voted against the bill because it bailed out Wall Street executives but didn't do enough to protect Main Street.  Much of it came from Republican representatives who see the bill as a violation of the "free market."

As many members have pointed out, this is a repulsive situation to find ourselves in: Decades of systematic dismantling of government oversight and regulation on the financial industry have made our families and communities vulnerable.  The question of how to fix the situation is one that the public, by and large, has not been invited to participate in.

With the bill still under negotiation, there is time for you to weigh in.  Here are some suggestions from allied organizations who are keeping their eyes on the bailout.  (Janet Tucker also posted a couple of action steps in the comment section of the bailout post from last week.)

From United For a Fair Economy (more info here): 

Make your voice heard.  Call Congress today (toll-free 800-830-5738 or 202-224-3121) and demand that any bailout plan include: 

  1. mortgage assistance for those most affected by the crisis.
  2. controls on excessive CEO pay.
  3. protection for ordinary taxpayers from bearing the costs of the bailout, by returning a portion of any profits made by bailed-out banks to the American people, and increasing taxes on wealthy investors.

And this, from Jobs With Justice
National:

 

 

Call your Representative and Senator through the Capitol Hill switchboard  - (202) 224-3121 - to tell them:

 

1)      No Bail-out for Wall Street.  They had their fun, now they deserve the hang-over.

2)      Don’t be panicked by the very people that caused the crisis.  Take the time to develop a REAL recovery plan for our economy that puts people first, by addressing foreclosures, jobs, affordable housing, pensions, infrastructure and health care. 

3)      Restructure our financial systems, with renewed public oversight, to meet the needs of our entire economy, not just the finance sector, and end the excessive political clout of these few firms.

4)      Bring in fair taxation, honoring work over wealth, and stop subsidizing excessive CEO salaries.

These are some options.  What do you think we ought to be telling our representatives?

The bail out

Posted by Janet Tucker at September-30-2008 08:31 AM
Time for a Taxpayers Revolt

Sep 29, 2008 By Medea Benjamin


Medea Benjamin's ZSpace Page

Congress will be voting this week on the biggest give-away of our tax dollars to the financial sector in our nation's history. Despite attempts by legislators to portray this as a compromise bill that helps both Wall St. and Main St., in reality it represents an appalling transfer of wealth upward.



While there's a distinct possibility the plan will pass this week, we should oppose it both before and after it passes. Jobs with Justice is calling for a national day of action against the bailout this Wednesday, Oct. 1. In conjunction with this, we are calling for actions against Congress on the same day. Building on the wave of protests against the Wall Street bailout last week, we must put Congress on notice that they pass this bill at their own risk. We were told by congressional insiders that last week's protests slowed down the rush to pass this horrendous bill. Another day of widespread national protest could kill it off and open space for a much more sensible plan. With just weeks left until the election, it's also the perfect chance to tell Congress they'll be facing a taxpayer revolt if they vote for the bailout. Look for the closest office of your Congressperson or Senator. Organize your family, friends, group, whomever to do a picket, hand out literature, flood the office with phone calls - whatever. The imperative is to act now. (For more information, go to bailoutmainstreet.com.)



Despite talk of a crisis being averted, many are skeptical as to whether the bailout will even restore confidence - and credit - to the banking system. As one report notes, "Doubts remain as to how it could immediately thaw the frozen money and credit market."



Even if the bailout somehow revives the banking sector, few economists think it will jumpstart the consumer credit machine. For one, over-leveraged, money-strapped banks will eagerly dump near-worthless securities on taxpayers for cash to bulk up their reserves. Plus, with working hours and wages declining, unemployment, home foreclosures and inflation surging, banks are in no mood to give consumers more credit, so consumption - and hence the economy - will continue to contract.



This is why the bill is a scam. For all the talk of transparency in the bailout, there has been zero transparency in the political process. We weren't allowed to see any details of the bailout other than the government will go on a shopping binge of buying toxic mortgage-backed securities. Our elected officials - who work for us - are trying to hide the fact that the fix is in. They are planning a shotgun wedding by slathering makeup on a rotting corpse, dumping it at the altar and hoping taxpayers don't catch on before we're trapped in a 30-year marriage to pay for this financial debacle.



The plan will be sold as fair to everyone and "the best deal" possible. Bullshit.



First, the cost is being minimized. The Wall Street Journal cheerily reports that in the worst-case scenario, the annual cost would be a measly $42 billion in interest and principal. (http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122245659564179649.html) A new study of banking crises around the world, however, puts the average cost at 16 percent of a country's gross domestic product, which would amount to more than $2 trillion here. That's more than $10,000 of future income for every single adult in the United States. http://www.economist.com/finance/displaystory.cfm?story_id=12305746 Everything else in the proposed bill is window dressing. Language in the draft states "The government can use its power ... to help reduce the 2 million projected foreclosures in the next year." That's can, not will. Other measures for housing relief amount to tax breaks - so the banks get socialism, while the rest of us get to eat conservative orthodoxy. Similarly, there are waffling words like "Meaningful judicial review of the Treasury Secretary's action." Does anyone believe that a Republican administration of the present or future would subject itself to "meaningful" review? In terms of equity stakes, it's limited to "opportunities" for ownership stakes and profit making in companies seeking a bailout. In all likelihood, this will amount to pennies of equity for each bailout dollar in a few companies. And the provision to disburse the $700 billion in two installments is meaningless. Congress has just a 15-day window to vote to block the second payout, making it highly unlikely, and the next president can just veto the measure. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122260585791683335.html?mod=article-outset-box



The bill's slogan is "Reinvest, Reimburse and Reform," which echoes the New Deal's rallying cry of "Relief, Reform and Reconstruction." But deliberately eliminated is any relief and any rebuilding.



Is it any surprise that the Democratic leadership caved in on every proposal for direct aid to homeowners on the brink? And there was no attempt to push for the type of government intervention that could actually revive the economy: public works, national healthcare and alternative energy investments.



Provisions like limiting executive pay and cancelling golden parachutes are tossing out bones. Does it make any difference if some Wall Street billionaire can't buy a new Gulf Stream jet or a new manor in Tuscany? What would make a difference is cancelling the Bush tax cuts, closing corporate tax loopholes, resurrecting the estate tax and ending the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. Let the super-rich pick up the tab for once. The Democrats said a bill that addressed the needs of ordinary Americans instead of Wall St. investors was simply "not feasible." Funny how the Republicans never think that. A small minority of Republicans in the House nearly killed the bill because they maintained iron-willed ideological unity. Of course it's too much to expect a spineless Democratic leadership to do the same.



That's where we come in. The free markets are completely discredited, and it's almost certain that other economic crises are lurking down the road. Paradoxically, this means there is significant political space to build a broad consensus for a 21st-Century New Deal that would stop spending our tax dollars on war and Wall Street, and instead help struggling homeowners and build affordable housing; fund job creating projects for clean energy and rebuilding our infrastructure; and fund a universal health-care system that would help American families, while cutting the nation's long-term healthcare costs.



It's time to for a taxpayers revolt against this mind-boggling Wall St. bailout. It's time to build a broad coalition to demand a 21st Century New Deal. This is our best, last hope.





Medea Benjamin is the co-founder of CODEPINK, founding director of Global Exchange and has been active in human rights and social justice struggles around the world for more than 20 years. Arun Gupta is an editor of The Indypendent and wrote the email that inspired the day of national protest against the bailout plan for Wall Street.

What does Mr. Benjamin propose?

Posted by martin at September-30-2008 09:28 AM
I agree with Mr. Benjamin's critic. I like many American's am mad as hell that the leadership of our nation, beginning over 20 years ago, has led us into this mess.
Imbedded in Mr. Benjamin's tirade however is very little of an offering of a solution. His only offer is: "And there was no attempt to push for the type of government intervention that could actually revive the economy: public works, national healthcare and alternative energy investments." - all of which I support.
He however gives me the impression that its OK to let everything go to ____ in the meantime. The freezing of capital will cause the economy to grind to a halt before it can begin again.
Tough love is a solution Mr. Benjamin, but for those of us who are not without some debt and have children, its not an attractive solution.

ideas

Posted by Erik Hungerbuhler at September-30-2008 09:40 AM
What about instead of giving away all of this money away to failing banks, the government matched citizens up to some percent when investing money in their IRAs. This would encourage savings, help people prepare for retirement, and put a bunch of money back into the market. Just throwing an idea out there.

Also, what is wrong with investing in large public works projects? They would provide decent jobs, build up our infrastructure, and lower unemployment. And lowered unemployment would push wages up for people. That seems pretty sensible to me. I am not an economist though.