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Friday, March 20, 2009

Why people don't have faith in government to fix problems

This week's shameful display by politicians in Washington to beat their breasts and demonize AIG has revealed even more clearly why we shouldn't want those very same politicians to be running our economy, health care industry, education system, and energy policy. Michael Gerson perfectly captures that display of self-satisfied hypocrisy.
President Obama vowed to "pursue every legal avenue to block these bonuses," when the proper "legal" avenue was to write a responsible law -- a process his own administration apparently undermined. "I'll take responsibility," says the president -- before, in the next few breaths, explaining, "We didn't grant these contracts." And, "We've got a lot on our plate." And, "It's my job to make sure that we fix these messes, even if I don't make them." So Obama seems to be saying: I'll take credit for taking the blame for something that is entirely the fault of others. Positively Clintonian.

"This is an example," thunders Rep. Barney Frank, "of people at the commanding heights of the economy misbehaving, abusing the system" -- which is completely true . . . of the conference committee that reshaped the stimulus bill in secret. Sen. Charles Grassley urged AIG executives to contemplate suicide. This combination of viciousness, shamelessness and cluelessness has consequences. It drains what little political will remains to confront the credit crisis -- an effort that may eventually require spending a trillion dollars or more to help purchase toxic debt. Thanks to AIG, Congress and the administration, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner may find his next round of necessary bailouts greeted by a revolt of left and right.

And congressional demagoguery is compromising Geithner's own approach to resolving the credit crisis. Since the direct government purchase of toxic debt would be massively expensive, Geithner has floated the idea of enticing private investors to help buy that debt. The government would give loans or subsidies to mutual funds and hedge funds if they buy toxic securities. But few would make such a risky investment without the hope of large returns.

If those returns are realized, it is easy to imagine how hedge fund managers would be treated when hauled before Congress. "Perhaps the witness can explain to us how he justifies such windfall profits with the people's money? Have you no shame? Give us the names, addresses and phone numbers of every millionaire you enriched at public expense so we can leak them to the press."

What sane money manager would want to partner with a government that blames others for its mistakes, urges the violation of inconvenient contracts and threatens to tax benefits retroactively? One Wall Street expert told me, "Even if people trust the president, they don't trust Congress." This kind of trust and confidence is essential to the next stage of our economic recovery. It is also being actively undermined by the incompetence and hypocrisy of the government itself.
The goals of politicians are ahort-term -- get reelected. They're demonstrating every day why they aren't the ones who should be trying to run our economy from the heights of their own arrogance.

3 comments:

Aaron said...

Gerson's analysis has the misfortune of being divorced from the actual content of legislation he pretends to analyze (either as it passed, or in the version he supposedly preferred).

Bachbone said...

The same politicians who helped cause the mess now want us to let them fix it, and some of the same people selected by Bush to fix it (e.g., Paulson, Bernanke, Geithner), whose remedies have landed us in even deeper red ink, are still in charge (e.g., Geithner, Bernanke)and expect us to let them lead us back to solvency. That definition of insanity ("Doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.") seems apt here. Bernanke allegedly is an expert on The Great Depression. If true, no one in D.C. is listening to him, for Obama and his team are marching us toward the Hoover/FDR cliff quick-step.

Christopher said...

Government hands taxpayer money to irresponsible businessmen. Irresponsible businessmen use taxpayer money irresponsibly. And the government is shocked, shocked!