I appreciate that nobody knows what the hell they're doing about the economic crisis, but if their intention is to perpetuate a leadership vacuum, they should just kindly get out of the way instead. I mean I can understand (but not condone) wanting to hide out for the next eight weeks, kicking the can down the road for someone else to deal with, but this see-saw crap is starting to annoy me. At the very least, he should start keeping his mouth shut so it's not so obvious that he's ad-libbing this whole thing. When the crisis is, in significant part, one of confidence, broadcasting that you're making it up as you go along just seems like the wrong move.
"Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, less than a week after indicating he would let the Obama administration decide how to use the second half of the $700 billion financial fund, is considering asking for the money."
http://www.bloomberg.com
Monday, November 24, 2008
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
McCain is no leader on financial reform
John McCain has announced his intention to, if elected, order Treasury to fully insure deposits at our nations banks. His announcement demonstrates his inability to lead this country out if its current banking crisis.
First, he has shown a lack of understanding of the regulatory structure of the US banking system. Treasury is not the agency that insures deposits. The FDIC is. The FDIC is an independent agency, not a division of Treasury (unlike, say, the OCC), and not dependent on taxpayer funding. By choosing the wrong agency to insure deposits, JM has demonstrated his unfitness to manage this crisis.
Second, his proposal is not novel. It is, in fact, already being implemented. Earlier today, the FDIC, in conjuction with Treasury and the Federal Reserve, announced the Temproary Liquidity Guarantee Program. Under the plan, certain newly issued senior unsecured debt issued on or before June 30, 2009, would be fully protected in the event the issuing institution subsequently fails. In addition, any participating depository institution will be able to provide full deposit insurance coverage for non-interest bearing deposit transaction accounts, regardless of dollar amount. This new, temporary guarantee—which expires at the end of 2009—will help stabilize these accounts.
What is important about this? Well, it shows that JM has got no legitimate claim to leadership on this issue. Fully insuring deposits is not novel--it is a mere echo of what the European Banks announced over the last two weeks. That's not leadership. (In fact, all it does is stop the bleeding, preventing depositors from moving their money to the european banks. It is a tough sell to claim leadership when you are merely the last player to enter a race to the bottom.) Next, it shows that, far from leading the US out of crisis, he's not even a participant. In announcing a plan that's already being implemented, he shows us that he has no idea what the regulators are currently doing. He's neither an innovator, or a leader. In fact, the crisis and the government's response to it are moving right along under his radar. That's not leadership. It's ignorance.
http://www.fdic.gov/news/news/press/2008/pr08100.html
First, he has shown a lack of understanding of the regulatory structure of the US banking system. Treasury is not the agency that insures deposits. The FDIC is. The FDIC is an independent agency, not a division of Treasury (unlike, say, the OCC), and not dependent on taxpayer funding. By choosing the wrong agency to insure deposits, JM has demonstrated his unfitness to manage this crisis.
Second, his proposal is not novel. It is, in fact, already being implemented. Earlier today, the FDIC, in conjuction with Treasury and the Federal Reserve, announced the Temproary Liquidity Guarantee Program. Under the plan, certain newly issued senior unsecured debt issued on or before June 30, 2009, would be fully protected in the event the issuing institution subsequently fails. In addition, any participating depository institution will be able to provide full deposit insurance coverage for non-interest bearing deposit transaction accounts, regardless of dollar amount. This new, temporary guarantee—which expires at the end of 2009—will help stabilize these accounts.
What is important about this? Well, it shows that JM has got no legitimate claim to leadership on this issue. Fully insuring deposits is not novel--it is a mere echo of what the European Banks announced over the last two weeks. That's not leadership. (In fact, all it does is stop the bleeding, preventing depositors from moving their money to the european banks. It is a tough sell to claim leadership when you are merely the last player to enter a race to the bottom.) Next, it shows that, far from leading the US out of crisis, he's not even a participant. In announcing a plan that's already being implemented, he shows us that he has no idea what the regulators are currently doing. He's neither an innovator, or a leader. In fact, the crisis and the government's response to it are moving right along under his radar. That's not leadership. It's ignorance.
http://www.fdic.gov/news/news/press/2008/pr08100.html
Thursday, June 12, 2008
Shorter Scalia:
If we don't suspend the constitution whenever the president wants, we're all gonna die (pdf)!
Wednesday, March 26, 2008
Wednesday, March 5, 2008
Just as I suspected!
As I predicted, I haven't kept up my blogging! It's scary how accurate my predictions can be...
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