Blogs at the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism

Posts Tagged ‘TARP’

Capitalism at its Weakest

December 2nd, 2008 by D Gigs

The problem with Capitalism is that when it doesn’t work, everybody expects a quick fix.

My original thought in September was that the U.S. government should never bail out financial institutions, especially using taxpayer money.

But the Treasury can’t undo what’s been done, they can only consider what TARP is actually doing to relieve a one-year-old recession and a tumorous financial crisis.

If you ask me — and I’m sure if asked Adam Smith — Corporate America needs to lean from its mistakes and accept that a free-market economy has its pros and cons. The more we soften the collapse of embattled corporations, the less likely those business will ever make genuine changes in how they run their operations or how they cut corners to make a bigger profit.

And the more our government tries to clean up the mess, the more likely future generations of American consumers, businesses, banks and investors will make the same mistakes.

The intervention between JP Morgan and Bear Sterns was tolerable. It was less a bailout in my view than an aggressive push. But it also flipped open a Pandora’s Box.

TARP is becoming a well-recognized mistake and any similar initiatives given to the auto industry would show equally lame results. Yet the Big Three have their open palms out now.

Goldman is sinking. Citi is imploding. And U.S. taxpayers are out $700 billion. Why would Ford, GM and Chrysler prove any different?

Here’s a solution: Take all that bailout money, put it towards education and start teaching finance and economics to kids in elementary school. Make it part of the core curricculum in all public and private schools all the way up to high school.

When $700 Billion is Just Not Enough

November 3rd, 2008 by Carl Winfield

Treasury Secretary, Henry Paulson, is trying to save the financial system. But the Treasury’s Troubled Asset Relief Program or TARP cannot fund all of the financial institutions that have applied for it.

Regulators for the Treasury have announced that the agency expects at least 1,800 publicly-held financial institutions to line up for their piece of the $700 billion bailout designed to rid banks of toxic assets.

Paulson moved quickly to shore up the financial services sector in the midst of a meltdown. And, to date, Treasury plans to divide $33 billionĀ  among the nine largest US banks and 16 regional banks. But the Treasury Secretary may have opened up a Pandora’s box since, now, almost any financial institution can apply for a piece of the pie.

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