What do all of you anti-bailout folks propose instead?
Let them go out of business? Nice theory, disastrous policy in reality.
BTW, have any of you noticed that the mid-80s Chrysler bailout was a resounding success, despite Chrysler's current problems?
I'm far more for the bailout of the auto industry then for the Bank bailouts. You see these things have costs and our credit card is maxxed out. Nobody is buying our long term treasuries and bonds. Bill Gross of Pimco says that the US will lose it's AAA status for loans, this in the wake of the UK being downgraded from AAA stable to AAA negative. The long term bond yield is rising. This may not sound important but it is critical. The government has two (well three, but I will discuss that as well. Let's just say the 3rd is BAD) means of raising money:
One: we sell debt (e.g. T-bills, bonds etc.). To sell debt the AAA rating is key as it is a virtual guarantee that the investor will get their money back with a profit. The misrepresentation of Sub-Prime loans as AAA debt when converted into loan packages kicked off this disaster. Now we are having a hard time selling long term debt for the first time in modern memory, maybe ever.
Two: the collection of taxes. This year due to the recession/depression we lost so many jobs that we had a net loss on taxes as people earned more in tax refunds then the government brought in. This happened in the 1980's but things were different then. Since the 1980's we have a deficit so large that it is scheduled to consume 100% of the GDP within 5 years this is excluding long term commitments like Social Security, Veteran's benefits and Medicare (a private public scam for medical insurance companies benefits we need single payer universal health care which would cost FAR LESS!).
Option Three the bad one: So now we have taken up the Japanese idea of Quantitative Easing (QE) a euphemism for printing money. The Fed buying the treasuries with newly (electonically) minted dollars. This will cause extreme inflationary pressure. One might think with all the deleveraging we will face deflation but this is not so. Look at the price gains in commodities this year, the cost of gas, groceries etc. all are rising. QE might have worked for Japan as the rest of the world was not in recession and they could still sell their goods from their solid industrial base (we have no industry to speak of other then failing auto and military industrial) and their status as a creditor to the US. The US faces a situation far more akin to the Weimar republic or Zimbabwe where we have insurmountable debt, an extreme recession and now the printing of money.
Here is the result, the man might be a millionaire or even a billionaire but that don't help you when a loaf of bread costs millions or billions.
Or if you prefer to see a white person in trouble because you are desensitized to the plight of africans:
In the Weimar republic seen above it became more cost effective to burn money for warmth as it took so much money to buy firewood you got more heat from burning the money.
The solution? Buy some equities that are solid, buy physical gold and silver (and their related stocks e.g. mining stocks or futures but NOT ETFS!) also oil and other energy stocks and buy productive land. Physical silver is cheap still (maybe $16.50 per ounce) and can be bought here in Portland. Physical silver went from 8 marks in 1919 to about 80,000,000,000 marks in 1923 in the Weimar republic. At the same time a loaf of bread went from roughly 4 marks to about 20,000,000,000 marks for comparison.
It is unlikely that it will be nearly this bad in the US but a five to tenfold increase in prices in the next 3 years is quite likely indeed.
If you don't believe me perhaps you will believe Jim Rogers the one time business partner and co-founder along with George Soros of the Quantum Fund in the 1970's which had 1000+% returns. Jim Rogers correctly called the bull market in China in the 1980's.
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Here is someone who thinks we have a shot at a new bull market based on green tech. I have green tech positions for this exact reason. I also have heavy commodity positions for the above reasons.