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Let’s face it: We’re socialists! Bank bailouts to proceed

Dean Takahashi, VentureBeat10.14.2008
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The Treasury Department is expected to announce tomorrow that it will invest $250 billion in U.S. banks, according to the New York Times. It is also expected to announce it will guarantee loans for up to three years, a measure aimed at restoring lending between banks.

So much for laissez-faire capitalism. Goodbye to all that. And this is coming from Henry Paulson, President Bush’s man, who has now become the ultimate pragmatist. As they say, there are no atheists in foxholes. And it appears that there are no dyed-in-the-wool capitalists in the midst of a financial meltdown.

We’ll see if the measure will prop up stock markets for a second day. The Dow gained 936 points on Monday, the largest single-day gain since the 1930s. I never thought I’d see the day when the Bush Administration brought back echoes of Franklin D. Roosevelt. But these steps appear to be necessary to unstick the credit markets so that banks will start lending again.

For Republicans to do this is the ultimate irony, since they widely criticized Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez for nationalizing the oil industry. Indeed, Chavez is now mockingly calling Bush his socialist “comrade.”

Back in March, after the collapse of Bear Stearns, the bank bailout was still a matter for debate. But faced with the collapse of the economy, no one wants to go down as fiddling while Rome burned. Of course, this is not the same kind of socialism you’d find in other places. The die hards are calling it socialism for Wall Street, or corporate welfare. But it looks as if countries around the globe are converging on the same solution. No one wants to be the next Iceland. When they write the textbooks when this is all over, I’d like to see how they describe the U.S. economic system. Is it capitalist? Not at the moment.

Reprinted with permission from VentureBeat. Story copyright 2008 VentureBeat Inc. All rights reserved.

And government intervention is what caused this in the first place. Now it looks as if, shades of Hoover and FDR, that more intervention to fix it might possibly deepen and extend it. This "bailout" is nothing of the sort. It is the government trying to prevent the one thing that allows a free economy to function in the first place: risk and consequence. This bailout does not address the root of problem we have had from the original Depression: government interference in market forces (ie privatizing the profits but socializing the risk). So once again, the greedy who took too many risks gets bailed out by the coercion of the state while the smart who played by the rules pay the tab.

Wonderful.

Ah Capitalism, we hardly knew ye. In fact, I wish we had actually tried ye.


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