3/24/09

Have some knowingly created a schemein which a few may profit from taxpayer largesse?

Private-sector investors get subsidies from the government


 in both leverage and insurance


and current bank shareholders get higher prices for their assets


 via these subsidies


 


Thus the plan ultimately may cost the taxpayer more


 than if the government had stepped in more aggressively


 to take full ownership and pay low prices for these assets


 


More worrisome, this fix might only be temporary


 


 The banks could still have too little capital…


 


Then we will just have to put capital into them again later


 but after this money is squandered and the fiscal stimulus runs out


 


Adam Posen


Deputy Director


Peterson Institute for International Economics


 


If the Treasury department ran hypothetical simulations


with different levels of leverage when testing the PPIP


and found that lower prices may have been offered


coincident with fewer government incentives


 


and taxpayers pay relatively more for toxic assets then otherwise


who benefits and who pays the price?

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