EconoBlogosphere's unanimous verdict: Wall Street bailout plan will soak taxpayers

In the last 24 hours, there has been an explosive outpouring of analysis of and revulsion for the Wall Street Bailout plan, from economics professors to financial traders to laypeople. And the verdict is in: Paulson's plan can only "succeed" if the taxpayer overpays for cr***y securities, and then sells them at a discount to Wall Street. Paulson alone gets to decide which Wall Street players win and lose; but it is a certainty that the taxpayer must lose, perhaps $1,000,000,000,000 (that's TRILLION).
I have prepared a round-up of the econo-blogosphere opinion below. The detailed analysis by "Naked Capitalism" is particularly compelling. Mish and Lee Adler (one a Ron Paul acolyte, the other an old fashioned progressive) both encourage a Senate Filibuster. Finally, Stirling Newberry says today and tomorrow will truly show Barack Obama's character.

Top-rated economics and finance blogger Calculated Risk says there is "no upside ... for taxpayers":

[T]he cost is still unknown, but there is no way that the taxpayers will profit. My initial estimate is that the direct costs of the Paulson plan will be $700 billion to taxpayers. That is about double the cost of the S&L crisis (compared to GDP).

....The plan only limits the Treasury to "$700,000,000,000 outstanding at any one time", so the total purchases can exceed $700 billion. In fact, every time the Treasury sells some securities, they will probably plow the net proceeds back into more troubled assets until the entire $700 billion is gone.

Think of a drunk gambler at a slot machine. He starts with $100 and slowly loses. Every now and then he wins some money, but he keeps putting the coins back into the slot until he has lost everything. That is how this plan will work.

Unless there is a dramatic changes, there will be no upside participation in the financial companies for taxpayers, and the taxpayers will recapitalize the banks by, in Krugman's words, "having taxpayers pay premium prices for lousy assets".

Prof. Paul Krugman agrees, saying this is a con-game at taxpayer expense:

As I posted earlier today, it seems all too likely that a “fair price” for mortgage-related assets will still leave much of the financial sector in trouble. And there’s nothing at all in the draft that says what happens next; although I do notice that there’s nothing in the plan requiring Treasury to pay a fair market price. So is the plan to pay premium prices to the most troubled institutions? Or is the hope that restoring liquidity will magically make the problem go away?
....

The Treasury plan, by contrast, looks like an attempt to restore confidence in the financial system — that is, convince creditors of troubled institutions that everything’s OK — simply by buying assets off these institutions. This will only work if the prices Treasury pays are much higher than current market prices; that, in turn, can only be true either if this is mainly a liquidity problem — which seems doubtful — or if Treasury is going to be paying a huge premium, in effect throwing taxpayers’ money at the financial world.

And there’s no quid pro quo here — nothing that gives taxpayers a stake in the upside, nothing that ensures that the money is used to stabilize the system rather than reward the undeserving.

Even right-wing economist Harvard Prof. Greg Mankiw is aghast:

A Blank Check

A friend emails me a link to the proposed bailout legislation and asks,
Has more money ever been given with fewer restrictions on how it is used? Ever?
Update: Naked Capitalism's analysis of the plan is well worth reading.

And here is the aforementioned analysis by Naked Capitalism. If you truly want to understand Paulson's Wall Street bailout plan, this is the gold standard. That the taxpayer gets cleaned out isn't a bug, but a feature of the plan, and Paulson has admitted so behind closed doors:

....
The increase of the request from the initial $500 billion and the release of the shockingly short, sweeping text of the proposed legislation has lead to reactions of consternation among the knowledgeable, but whether this translates into enough popular ire fast enough to restrain this freight train remains to be seen.

First, .... here is the truly offensive section of an overreaching piece of legislation:
Decisions by the Secretary pursuant to the authority of this Act are non-reviewable and committed to agency discretion, and may not be reviewed by any court of law or any administrative agency.

This puts the Treasury's actions beyond the rule of law. This is a financial coup d'etat, .... Given the truly appalling track record of this Administration in its outsourcing, this is not an idle worry.
....
Nouriel Roubini does not think it passes the smell test:
`He's asking for a huge amount of power,'' said Nouriel Roubini, an economist at New York University. ``He's saying, `Trust me, I'm going to do it right if you give me absolute control.' This is not a monarchy.''
....
Now to the substance. The Treasury has been using the formula that it will buy assets at "fair market prices". . ....
Yet as we discussed, the plan makes no sense unless the Orwellian "fair market prices" means "above market prices." The point is not to free up illiquid assets. Illiquid assets (private equity, even the now derided CDOs were never intended to be traded, but pose no problem if they do not need to be marked at a large loss and/or the institution is not at risk of a run). Confirmation of our view came from a reader by e-mail:
I worked at [Wall Street firm you've heard of], but now I handle financial services for [a Congressman], and I was on the conference call that Paulson, Bernanke and the House Democratic Leadership held for all the members yesterday afternoon. It's supposed to be members only, but there's no way to enforce that if it's a conference call, and you may have already heard from other staff who were listening in.

Anyway, I wanted to let you know that, behind closed doors, Paulson describes the plan differently. He explicitly says that it will buy assets at above market prices (although he still claims that they are undervalued) because the holders won't sell at market prices. Anna Eshoo pressed him on how the government can compel the holders to sell, and he basically dodged the question. I think that's because he didn't want to admit that the government would just keep offering more and more.

.... this program is going to swing into action with the clear but not honestly disclosed intent of buying assets at above market prices when future markets and the analysts with the best track records on forecasting this decline (you can add Robert Shiller, CR at Calculated Risk, and Nouriel Roubini to the list) believe it has considerably further to fall.
....
Losses on the paper acquired are guaranteed. This is not a bug but a feature. The whole point of this exercise is an equity infusion to banks. ....

[Additionally,]
Taxpayers have no upside participation.

There is no regulatory reform as part of the package. ....

U. Cal. Berkeley economics Prof. Brad de Long also begs Congress to turn down this plan:

John McCain chose Sarah Palin to be his vice president.

There is a 40% chance John McCain will be president on January 21, 2009.

There is no way in hell that anybody should give any extra power to any Treasury Secretary chosen by John McCain.

I beg the Democrats in congress: write a bill that makes sense.

Prof. of Finance Luigi Zingales of the U. of Chicago agrees that the plan "crreate[s] a charitable institution that provides welfare to the rich -- at taxpayer expense" and offers a good alternative:

the solution is Chapter 11. In Chapter 11, companies with a solid underlying business generally swap debt for equity: the old equity holders are wiped out and the old debt claims are transformed into equity claims in the new entity which continues operating with a new capital structure.

Alternatively, the debt holders can agree to cut down the face value of debt, in exchange for some warrants. ..... So why is this well-established approach not used to solve the financial sector's current problems?

The obvious answer is that we do not have time; Chapter 11 procedures are generally long and complex, and the crisis has reached a point where time is of the essence. ....

The Paulson RTC will buy toxic assets at inflated prices thereby creating a charitable institution that provides welfare to the rich—at the taxpayers’ expense....

Since we do not have time for a Chapter 11 and we do not want to bail out all the creditors, the lesser evil is to do what judges do in contentious and overextended bankruptcy processes: to cram down a restructuring plan on creditors, where part of the debt is forgiven in exchange for some equity or some warrants. And there is a precedent for such a bold move. During the Great Depression....

The major players in the financial sector do not like it. It is much more appealing for the financial industry to be bailed out at taxpayers’ expense than to bear their share of pain..... The appeal of the Paulson solution is that it taxes the many and benefits the few. Since the many (we, the taxpayers) are dispersed, we cannot put up a good fight in Capitol Hill; while the financial industry is well represented at all the levels.
....
The decisions that will be made this weekend matter not just to the prospects of the U.S. economy in the year to come; they will shape the type of capitalism we will live in for the next fifty years.

Another top-rated economic blogger, Mike Shedlock a/k/a Mish who has a Ron Paul-ian political bent, begs for a Senate filibuster:

Congress is lining up to give "Unreviewable Dictatorial Power"to the Treasury while increasing the size of the already ridiculous proposal.

Contact Your Senator Today!

It's time to contact your senator. Here is contact information for Senators of the 110th Congress.

Phone or Email your Senators today. Tell them in your own words
Urge your senator to Filibuster any bailout legislation.

Emphatically state you do not want a bailout of any kind for anyone.
No Dictatorial power for Paulson or Bernanke
Taxpayers should not have to bail out banks making bad loans
Tell them that "The Fed" and Paulson are systemic risk".

So does Lee Adler of the Wall Street Examiner whose views are generally more progressive:

Dear Senator:

By assuming most of the bad debt from the financial system (if that’s even possible), the government will be infecting itself with the disease it has been seeking to treat. Interest rates will soar as investors perceive not only an increased threat of inflation from the Fed’s money printing that has already begun, but also from the correct perception that the government is destroying its own creditworthiness.Through a combination of softening tax receipts, a thermonuclear explosion of government spending for bailouts, and rising expenditures in all other aspects of government, the US will soon be facing trillion dollar deficits at a time when the only way to pay for them is to sell more and more bonds.

..... The government has in turn taken us from the the brink of financial system collapse and added to that the threat of financial collapse of the government itself, a fate which I would suggest is far worse than allowing Wall Street to collapse and money market funds to break the buck. No question, that’s a bad thing, but a loss of faith in the financial system is one thing, a loss of faith in the government’s ability to pay its bills and protect the public is a catastrophe of unimaginable proportions. If this program is passed by Congress, I fear that our fate will have been sealed.

I have no hope that this can be stopped in the House. Let’s hope that enough of our Senators are wise enough and courageous enough to stop this madness before it destroys our beloved Republic.

Finally, Stirling Newberry says this is a "defining moment" for Obama:

Liberals have pined for a new deal moment, well, it has arrived.
....
One of the crucial moments of the New Deal was one which occurred before FDR was in office. He was offered, by Hoover, a chance to wield the powers of the Presidency early, if, and only if, he renounced the "so-called New Deal." .... FDR replied that he was still a private citizen, and would assume the duties of office at the constitutionally appointed time.
That is to say, FDR invited Herbert Hoover to engage in political auto-fornication. Now this is one of the most hard minded decisions that could have been made. It is absolutely true that some people who lost everything in the intervening months would have been temporarily spared had FDR accepted the agreement. It is also clear that millions more would have suffered far worse. FDR, as much as he would be the architect, or at least General Contractor, for the liberal state in America, was also willing to break eggs to make an omelet.
It is precisely this willingness to take short term losses, to not be held hostage by a mad man, that made FDR able to see through the project to its conclusion.
....
They key is to avoid being saddled with the debt, and leaving the same bums in charge. It's really that simple. That's why the Village is all fuzzy for the RTC all of a sudden: the consumer takes the shaft, and the people who crashed the sports car walk away scott free.
This is Obama's Presidential moment. If like FDR and Lincoln he torpedoes an unacceptable deal imposed on him by an outgoing order that wants to get everything in return for not knocking over the apple cart, then he has a chance at greatness. Otherwise he's just another janitor in the elephant parade....
His campaign option is simple: this bail out, if passed is toxic to the American public. People who have not seen a raise in 8 years, who are upside down in their homes, who are going to get laid off from some of the few good jobs streams left, who are in industries not being bailed out, are all going to be united in seeing this as what it is: odious frat boy socialism. If Obama wants to right flank the Republicans, then here is also his chance. He can present himself as a Main Street Republican at heart, as FDR often did, saying that the people who got to play, must now pay, and that personal responsibility attaches to great wealth.
So here it is Obama people, your guy wanted a defining moment. Today and tomorrow are it.

I'm sure I've missed a lot of other, excellent commentary. Please link to it in comments.

Comments

Stephanopolis

Dodd and Boehner were on This Week this morning and George asked them straight up "what would happen if Wall Street wasn't bailed out" neither gave a straight answer, they then said that Paulson laid out a scenario so stark and sobering they had to act now. Again George asked what was it he said - they both dodged and squirmed and didn't answer. This is classic "disaster capitalism" or shock doctrine - use a crisis to ram thru an agenda.

So I guess there really isn't any consequences for main street if they can't answer these simple and straight forward questions.

I blew coffee thru my nose when I heard Hank Paulson on the morning shows saying "we need to find out and understand how this happened" - not rocket science there Hank, we all know how it happened - too cheap and easy credit fueling speculation and bubbles, and lax regulation encouraging risky and corrupt behavior. - Duh! Then he went in to the usual retreaded variations of the "no one saw it coming" argument even though many have been sounding the alarms for some time.

No unelected agency or person should be wielding this kind of power over our economy

Welcome to the Peoples Republic of Wall Street folks

People need to reject the fear

This bill is getting pushed in the same way that the Patriot Act was pushed after 9/11: scare everyone and get it pushed through before anyone has a chance to think about it.

bipartisan support

bipartisan support growing in the Senate.

People, write your representatives. We have a takeover happening as we type.

More Economists weighing in

Robert Reich says it's a real bad idea. Thinks good old fashioned Ch. 11 bankruptcy is the way to go. Then he says it looks hopeless and Congress is going to give Paulson a blank check but says they should make a series of conditions.

Paul Craig Roberts is blasting the deal too.

Krugman and Roubini as well

Krugman and Roubini as well

More Economists weighing in

Was it Leno who said we are in a new chapter in US history?

Chapter 11!!

Bernanke & Milton Friedman

In case folks are not aware, Milton Friedman is one of Bernanke's heros.

They believe the Federal Reserve caused the Great Depression by contracting the money supply.

If you do not know Friedman is the architect of the Shock Doctrine

I agree with NDD here that we have a classic shock doctrine moment going on.

Now supposedly Bernanke has studied not only the Great Depression but also the Japan financial crisis.

My question is has he studied and has a philosophy of the Friedman Chicago school?

Cause they can study that til doomsday but I'm sorry their philosophy is just not the way we want to go in a Democracy!

Race Against Time

It's pretty clear, Paulson and the Lobbyist machine know full well how to frenzy up and control the Press and they are trying to whip a frenzy to get this passed like....tonight...your classic fear reaction before anyone has a chance to think about what is happening.

other countries may adopt rescue plans claims Paulson after it was leaked out that foreign banks were going to access US taxpayer cash and the dissent is building.

They are clearly also running the Shock Doctrine on Congress with this you must act right this very minute.

Gee wiz, how long have people been warning about this...yet magically one must act within 24 hours as if this is all news?

This is a setup.

EconoBlogosphere's unanimous

Pretty much sums it up:

 

And this prescient classic from 2007

 

Bailout Truth

"I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies. If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around the banks will deprive the people of all property until their children wake-up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered."
> > Thomas Jefferson 1802