Once again, Warren Mosler is spot on in his analysis of what could a very contractionary result if Congress acts as if this bailout must be "paid for" in some way. Read below:
   
  
    
      "It would be counter productive to add the $700 billion to the budget deficit calculation if
 the proposal goes through and is executed, since Congress is likely to
 take measures to somehow constrain spending or increase revenues to try
 to ‘pay for it’. This would be highly contractionary at precisely
 the wrong time.
 
 Note that if the Fed buys mortgage securities it doesn’t add tothe deficit, while the Treasury buying the same securities does? And in
 both cases treasury securities are sold to ‘offset operating
 factors’; either way, Fed or Treasury, the government exchanges
 treasury securities for mortgage securities.
 
 When any agent of the government buys financial assets, thatparticularly spending per se doesn’t add to aggregate demand, or in
 any way or directly alter output and employment.
 
 Yet here we are listening to the Fed Chairman, the TreasurySecretary, and members of Congress talking about $700 billion of
 ‘taxpayer money’ and a potential increase in the deficit of $700
 billion.
 
 And no one argues with statements like ‘it is even more than we spent
 in Iraq’ and ‘that much money could better spent elsewhere’.
 Unfortunately for the US economy, this supposed addition to the deficit
 is likely to negatively impact future spending, perhaps at the time when
 it’s needed most to support demand.
 
 I recall something like this happened in 1937, when revenuescollected for social security weren’t ‘counted’ as part of the
 Federal budget, and the millions collected to go into the new trust fund
 
 were in fact simply a massive tax hike. Unemployment went from something
 like 12% to maybe 19% (and stayed about that high until WWII deficit
 spending brought unemployment down to near zero). After that happened
 much was written regarding public vs private accounting and the cash
 flow from social security and other programs was subsequently counted as
 part of the federal budget calculation, as it is today, and for the same
 reason."
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   Link to article
I guess I am mistaken but I am SURE that I heard when Paulson became TS he had to Sell his GS stock (at a favorable tax rate - maybe even zero).
ReplyDeleteI do not have time to research this but people on the radio keep saying that he is protecting his position.
I actually trust his motives even though I am going back and forth on the plan in my mind. As much as I liked Paul O'Neil until after he left I am glad that we have a wall street exec in this position now.
Billy
Yes, Paulson would have had to sell his holdings or put them in some kind of blind trust. Paul O'Neil would have done nothing, but, ironically, the same nothing is getting done now as well.
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