Capital Commerce

Beyond Uncle Sam’s Big Bailout

By James Pethokoukis

Posted: October 6, 2008

Here’s a can’t-miss moneymaking idea, no charge. Quickly surf over to CafePress.com, the mecca for design-it-yourselfers, and create a customized T-shirt emblazoned with this soon-to-be lament of your fellow Americans everywhere: “I just paid a trillion bucks to bail out Wall Street—and all I got was this lousy economy!”

As the kids say, it’s funny because it’s true. Nothing Washington is considering right now is going to change the harsh reality that the stagnant economy will most likely get lots worse before it gets much better. What government action will accomplish, we hope, is avoiding a calamitous shutdown <[lb]>of credit markets that could turn a recession into It-Which-Must-Not-Be-Named. (Hint: It starts with a “d.”)

Let's say, for instance, that preventing a total financial meltdown keeps the economy from falling into a recession like the one back in 1982—by some measures, the worst since the Great Depression. The difference between a 1982-style recession and even so-so economic growth is roughly $400 billion in lost economic output. And given the continuing drag after 2009 from such a meltdown, any Uncle Sam-led bailout or rescue that prevents a nasty recession could actually pay for itself in fairly short order.

Housing crisis. If it works, of course. Wall Street doesn’t guarantee future returns, and neither does Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, the former head of Goldman Sachs. But are we forgetting something here? Economist Robert Brusca is dismissive of the Paulson approach for one big reason: “It does nothing to solve the housing issue.”

Indeed, falling home prices and the deluge of foreclosures remain squarely in the center of America’s current economic problems. So, what to do about that? Nada, many conservatives would say, explaining that the deflating price bubble needs desperately to find a level that corresponds to financial reality. But 2009 could well bring Son of the Mother of All Bailouts. Some liberals want an interventionist approach, such as having the government buy not just mortgage-backed securities but actual mortgages and then cut homeowners a deal. They point out that the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. is already doing something like that with mortgages held by IndyMac. Since taking the failed bank over, the government agency has made whole swaths of homeowners eligible for interest-rate reductions or rate caps. Even some on the right want Washington to take direct action to help housing. Former White House economist Glenn Hubbard proposes that the government refinance every U.S. mortgage into a 30-year fixed at 5.25 percent. It would be half the price of the Paulson plan, he estimates, and work better.

Here is another interesting idea: Have the government provide subsidies to struggling homeowners in return for a piece of a home’s future price appreciation. These contracts could then be packaged and sold to investors, here and abroad. Foreclosures would slow, and housing prices would stabilize. Idea author and financial entrepreneur Ralph Liu puts it all a bit more poetically: “If you stop the snow from melting, you won’t have a flood in the valley.” Hey, that’s catchy. Might look good on a T-shirt.

No way out????

James -- You main point, “that falling home prices and the deluge of foreclosures remain squarely in the center of America’s current economic problems”, is exactly right and the problem that must be reckoned with. It has not been at all, ignored by the bailout plan. The bailout plan is leaving it for all Americans that bought at high prices to suck it up for 10 years, pay the mortgage if they can, and take the loss that went to the greed of investment bankers, loan officers, and owners of Mortgage Backed Securities. Obviously, you’re going to get a lot of foreclosures and a freeze in the liquidity of homeownership.

Fatesrider of CA says

“RUN FANNIE AND FREDDIE the way they should be run - as investment lenders. Let the government take a piece of (if not all of) the profits and guarantee the risks.”

Means what??................ They are run as investment lenders, the problem are the overvalued loans, larger than the property that back them…………………….

Other than the government paying down these mortgages, the problem will persist for a long time………….. the only solution is to have a foreclosure board established with judges to decide on workout plans, somewhat subsidized by the government to make the workouts conventional loans that loan no more than the property value???

nikeduke of MA @ Oct 07, 2008 18:28:29 PM

Smoke This

“If you stop the snow from melting, you won’t have a flood in the valley.” Government participation in a homes appreciation will melt the economic snow, why snort the snow when you can smoke it, James!

What, Socialism is the only way out of this, melt some more snow James, better yet wear a t-shirt and do what you want then you may do what you like!

SimonSez of CA @ Oct 06, 2008 23:12:25 PM

Are you kidding me???

Dude, you JUST lambasted the idea of subsidizing homeowners in your last article, accusing it as being a 'liberal' practice. And the housing market DOES need to find stability, which it can't do if the market is artificially supported by government intervention.

Here's MY suggestion:

REGULATE THE DAMN MARKET.

RUN FANNIE AND FREDDIE the way they should be run - as investment lenders. Let the government take a piece of (if not all of) the profits and guarantee the risks.

Use those profits to invest in new technologies (Gee, I don't know, how about GREEN TECH for a change?). Investing (not giving away, but investing) in emerging technologies will stimulate job growth, creating more money in the market, freeing up credit.

The credit crunch is the major fear, which keeps businesses from being able to borrow for future growth. Green tech is emerging and promises to be a huge growth market - if given the investment opportunities. The government can make a MINT just finding the right technologies in which to invest, reducing the deficit, making the dollar stronger so that even with a credit crunch, we can buy more with less.

We spent so much money propping up investment banks choking on their own greed and mismanaged practices we shouldn't have let them live. Other banks will buy them up or they will pass into oblivion and new ones will emerge. But we need to make the dollar stronger and this particular Bushit idea will only make it weaker.

Perhaps consistency in ideas is genetic, but we've seen what 'fiscal responsibility' has done to this country. It's too bad they voted against stem cell research. That might have helped them learn how to be realistic when it comes to economics and human nature.

Fatesrider of CA @ Oct 06, 2008 14:43:13 PM

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Capital Commerce

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U.S. News business reporter Matthew Bandyk examines the issues, people, and debates that shape the nexus of political and economic life in the nation's capital.

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