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Seems to me the main sticking point that almost prevented an agreement on the falsely-named "bailout" package was the false impression that we taxpayers will have to reach into our pockets and somehow come up with seven hundred billion dollars on short notice. And I think that false impression resulted largely from the answer Jim Bunning got when he pressed Secretary Paulson for an answer to his question, "Where will the money come from?" Paulson, I think, answered too quickly; "The taxpayers" was his answer.
I wish he had said "bond buyers" instead of "taxpayers," because that's how it will really be funded. But he didn't. He said "taxpayers" -- and, unsurprisingly, that scared a lot of taxpayers.
I checked the wording of the not-a-bailout plan, and it clearly refers to Title 31 of the US Code as one of the main levers the Treasury will use to execute the plan: it will issue treasury bonds, bills, or notes as necessary.
When the Treasury sells T-bonds to willing buyers in the bond market, the transaction does not involve unwilling taxpayers. (Does Jim Bunning know that? How about Ron Paul? I'm not so sure.) In any case, I decided to build an eight-picture series of the "asset swap" to show why taxpayers need not be involved at any point in the swap.
The emergency situation as of last Friday. It would remain like this, or get worse, if Congress had not come together over the weekend
Approval of the plan enables the Treasury to go to the bond market -- repeat, the BOND market, NOT the taxpayers -- to obtain funds.
Uh-oh, those new T-bonds indicate that the national debt increased, right? Yes, but please don't have a heart attack yet; keep going.
Proceeds obtained from the bond buyers are used to buy up the questionable mortgage paper from the financial sector.
Liquidity in the banking sector is restored; banks once again start lending small, medium, and large businesses the money they need to meet their payrolls. The danger of a severe recession or a deflationary depression has been averted. At the same time, the Treasury's rescue process, highly transparent to the public, starts sorting out the good paper from the bad paper. (Let's call this a "cleansing" of the paper.)
The Treasury, having made it easier to judge the value of mortgage paper, auctions the paper off. The highest-bidding banks and financial firms buy the paper back from the Treasury.
Now the Treasury has money to repurchase T-bonds from willing sellers in the open bond market.
If the Treasury's cleansing process reveals enough high-quality paper, auctioning it off could yield a breakeven -- or even a profit -- for the Treasury.
And even if the process yielded a loss, it would mean recovering the difference from the financial sector, or at worst, not buying back quite all of those T-bonds.
Can you spot the only difference between this and Diagram 1? Hint: The taxpayers' funds didn't get affected by the process.
Conclusion:
One of the most unfortunate aspects of the last seven days' dialogue, in my judgment, was the mistaken impression that "taxpayers" would somehow have to come up with "seven hundred billion dollars" on very short notice -- and hand it over to Wall Street CEOs. No wonder everybody was angry; clueless talking heads were on every channel, egging us on. I was walking past a TV from which the dangerous renegade Lou Dobbs was sarcastically perpetuating his version of that false characterization, but I didn't get to hear more than a few sentences of Dobbs's uninformed tirade. Reason: his voice always triggers the involuntary reflex of getting myself away from that TV quickly as possible.
Obviously, there are all sorts of details that need to be worked out regarding the cleansing and auction processes -- and there are all sorts of good ideas being floated for those, too. The credit markets have yet to speak today (Monday), but I'm glad Capitol Hill came through with a plan that has only a few ugly ornaments hanging on the basic Paulson/Bernanke package. This should be good news to the markets.
If the process yeild a loss then Treasury will have to pay interest to the bond holders each year which comes from the tax payers.
In fact the tax payers are paying interest from day one the Treausry sells US Treasury paper to bond holders. Bond holders lend the money to the US for a price and that price is paid by tax papers. It's not free money.
Originally posted by Maxmars
If the process yeild a loss then Treasury will have to pay interest to the bond holders each year which comes from the tax payers.
In fact the tax payers are paying interest from day one the Treausry sells US Treasury paper to bond holders. Bond holders lend the money to the US for a price and that price is paid by tax papers. It's not free money.
And even if the process yielded a loss, it would mean recovering the difference from the financial sector, or at worst, not buying back quite all of those T-bonds.
Saying that the tax payers are not paying for this is like saying the Fed doesn't 'create' money out of nothing.
I disagree wholeheartedly that this is not a taxpayer burden, in fact, I believe that Paulson's quick answer was the truth..., he didn't have time to make up a lie, and it didn't matter to him anyway.
In the end the credit and the principle comes out of productivity and assets, they have none, we do.
Originally posted by Maxmars
It's ALL money from nothing.
Originally posted by redled
I think that the point is that money in debt is as safe as what it is pinned on.
Box 2 of 8 says "Treasury sells T-bonds to willing buyers"
Box 3 of 8, says "Treasury buys up questionable mortgage paper"
Box 4 of 8 says, "Banking sector's liquidity is restored...Treasury will sort out good paper from bad paper"
Box 5 of 8 says, "Treasury auctions triaged paper to the highest bidder"
Box 6 of 8 says, "Now the Treasury has money to repurchase T-bonds from willing sellers in the open bond market."
This is the most unrealistic scenario. Taxpayers are left holding the bag for this mess, because we will be buying junk at a premium and selling back junk at a discount...
Box 7 of 8 says, "If Treasury breaks even...taxpayer is untouched"
Box 8 of 8 says, "Back to normal functioning economy...whew"