From Government Bytes

    GM’s Money-Back Guarantee

    Posted by Government Bytes | 15 Sep

    From the Wall Street Journal's Washington Wire blog: In a rousing, campaign-like address, Obama hailed the return of 150 workers here yesterday, and the pending return of more than 1,000 more in the next three weeks as the plant gears up to build more Chevrolet Cobalts. Inventories of the small cars were depleted by the "cash for clunkers" program, and the Lordstown plant is preparing to launch the Chevy Cruze, a small, high-mileage car next year, just the sort the Obama administration has hoped GM would embrace. Obama said he hadn't run for president to run a car company. "It wasn't on my to-do list. It wasn't even something on my want-to-do list." But, he said, "For me to just let the auto industry collapse, to vanish, would have done unbelievable damage." Sounds great, but as NTU's Pete Sepp observed: "This Sunday, General Motors launched a new marketing campaign, 'May the Best Car Win,' and will offer car buyers a 60-day money-back guarantee. Perhaps a more fitting slogan is 'Taxpayers, You Lose.'" Anyone else concerned that what might "vanish" is the billions of tax dollars that Americans have "invested" in GM?  Email This Email This  Print This Print This



    From Government Bytes

    UK foreshadows political future for US banks

    Posted by Government Bytes | 27 Jul

    The BBC is reporting that Alistair Darling, the Chancellor of the Exchequer (roughly equivalent to our Treasury Secretary), is interested in questioning banks over whether their interest rates for small business loans and mortgages are too high. According to the BBC article, Mr Darling's comments come after a report by financial website Moneyfacts said banks had increased the interest rates they charge for personal mortgages nearly fourfold in recent months, despite the base rate remaining at a record low of 0.5%. Angela Knight, the chief executive of the British Bankers' Association (BSA), said banks had to pay a lot more than 0.5% for the funds they themselves borrowed in the wholesale money markets, and they had to pass this on to customers.... However, Stephen Alambritis, chief spokesman for the Federation of Small Businesses, said the chancellor was "quite right to haul in the banks". "It is hugely important that Mr Darling keeps tabs on the banks to ensure they are lending money to firms, and at fair rates. Firms need to be able to reap the benefits of the historically low base rate," he said. We've already heard some of this kind of stuff from Barney Frank and friends, but prepare for it to get much worse, not least because the TARP Inspector General, Neil Barofsky, recently said that there's no way to know what banks have done with their bailout funds. What the politicians forget is that banking is an extremely competitive industry. If interest rates seem stubbornly high for loans, the reason is simple: The perceived risks to lenders remain stubbornly high. Not only is it perfectly rational for a bank to worry about being paid back on a business loan or a mortgage in the current situation, but it's also perfectly rational to wonder whether government will compound the problem, such as by allowing judges to alter the principal amounts due on mortgages. Think about it another way: Let's say that in 2004 you had some extra cash lying around that you were willing to lend. Someone asked you for a loan to buy a house and you offered him a loan at 8% based on what you knew of his employment, the housing market at the time, etc. Now what if the same person came to you asking for the same loan for the same house (and let's assume that in that neighborhood, prices are now roughly where they were in 2004)? Would you still offer that loan at 8%? Of course not (if you're sane.) The rate would be higher to compensate for a myriad of additional risks, regardless of the so-called lower interest rate environment. Mr. Darling said that the UK government didn't bail out banks "out of some charitable act". But that's exactly what they did if the intention of the bailout was to get banks to lend money at rates which don't compensate them for the risk they're taking. (The charity, in that case, is to potential borrowers, not the banks. Though even that analogy isn't quite right because it's only liberals who believe that if A steals B's wallet and gives most of the money to C then A has been charitable rather than a criminal.) Of course, they also did it out of typical left-wing economic and political idiocy, thinking that they would be able to buy votes the way they always do. But this time it's not going to work because "public choice" economics and the ability of politicians to get away with spending a lot of money to provide a benefit to a narrow set of people is based on the cost to the broad majority of taxpayers being too low for them to notice or care. In the US, the Obama Administration is obviously saddling us and our children with new debt that's as great as the total debt from the time of the nation's founding until the time of Obama's inauguration -- including the disastrous spending of George W. Bush. Even the usually unaware average American voter, particularly the average American Democrat, will not look kindly on what Tom Coburn accurately termed "Generational Theft". (I think John McCain stole the term from Coburn, but if I got that backwards, I apologize to Senator McCain.) Some more from the BBC article: "The public will not understand it if they [the banks] don't seem to be doing their part," he told the BBC's Andrew Marr Show. "I want them to rebuild their balance sheets... but at the same time, because of the particular circumstances we're in now, because of the fact we've got this recession, we also need them to lend money," said Mr Darling. Allow me to translate what Darling really means: If the banks don't go out and lend money at lower rates, regardless of the business case for those loans or those rates, we will pillory them in public until they do. After all, I didn't divert billions of dollars of taxpayer money to those banks just to help my golf buddies (or at least not as far as the public knows.) Don't they realize that my political needs trump their fiduciary responsibilities; after all that was in the fine print of the "loan" documentation we made them sign. Can't you just hear Tim "the software made me do it" Geithner saying the same thing, flanked by Barney Frank, Chris Dodd, and the other scoundrels who have primary responsibility for the original mess? Chancellor Darling's words will with almost 100% certainty be parroted by Obama-loving bureaucrats and Democratic politicians in coming months as any so-called recovery fails to reduce unemployment and the high unemployment rates continue to dent Democrats' standing in public opinion. It's the necessary outcome of letting politicians get their stinking claws into the economic body of our nation.  Email This Email This  Print This Print This



    From Government Bytes

    Fiscal Advice from Jack Handey

    Posted by Government Bytes | 30 Jun

    With billions and billions for bailouts and stimulus spending, Congress seems to have taken fiscal advice from that renowned financial expert Jack Handey: "I hope that when I die, people say about me, 'Boy, that guy sure owed me a lot of money.'"  Email This Email This  Print This Print This



    From Government Bytes

    Novel Idea

    Posted by Government Bytes | 11 Jun

    Senator Mike Johanns of Nebraska, a first-termer who has shown real promise thus far into his tenure, is introducing the Free Enterprise Act. It contains a simple (and terrific) idea: requiring Congressional approval for release of TARP funds that would end up with government owning shares of a business. Too bad Congress didn't think of that when drafting TARP, huh? Johanns, BTW, wasn't around when that abomination was passed, and he's been one of the foremost advocates for taxpayers during subsequent fights over TARP and stimulus. Here's his announcement of the Free Enterprise Act...Why America Needs the Free Enterprise Act By Senator Mike Johanns, U.S. Senator for Nebraska The announcement that the government would provide $30 billion dollars more in TARP funds to General Motors in exchange for a 60 percent ownership interest in the company is unprecedented and almost unbelievable. Who ever imagined the taxpayers would wake up Monday morning and find out a deal was cut behind closed doors to make them majority owners of General Motors? If you add all of the government aid GM has or will receive, the taxpayers, with zero input, have invested $50 billion dollars in a high risk bankrupt company. That’s almost one-million dollars per job retained by GM. Sadly, there is no longer a dividing line between these private companies and the government. The government is now running or deeply involved in major industrial sectors of the economy: housing, banking, insurance, and automobiles. This is extremely troublesome and marks a fundamental shift in the way business is conducted in America. I believe this is the wrong approach and I am adamantly opposed to it. Some of my colleagues disagree with me. They believe the government should bailout the autos. Right now, none of us – whether for it or against it – has any say in whether the action goes forward. The legislative branch has effectively given the executive branch a free pass to do as it wishes with seven hundred billion dollars. TARP has become a license for government to experiment with private business. How do you think the original TARP vote would have gone back in September if members knew then what they know now? Remember, TARP was first presented as a toxic asset purchasing program to revive financial markets and to get credit flowing to consumers. That is what Congress approved. That’s all Congress approved. Then it became a blank check for failing banks; and the struggling insurance giant AIG; and the floundering housing market. Despite a December vote by Congress that rejected a bailout of the auto industry, TARP is now being used to bankroll the auto industry. How could anyone have predicted that an original plan to buy up toxic assets would be warped and twisted into the revolving slush fund it is today? People would have looked at me in disbelief if I had said - just a few months ago - that TARP funds would be used to buy General Motors. All this is happening without Congressional approval. The Free Enterprise Act would fix that. It’s simple and straightforward. It says any release of TARP funds that results in the government owning common or preferred stock will be allowed only if there is prior Congressional approval. Congress must reclaim its voice and duty to provide proper oversight of TARP. Let me be frank. I was not in the Senate when the first TARP vote occurred nor was I in office yet for the vote against providing emergency funds to the automobile industry. I was present in January and voted to disapprove President Bush’s request to release the second tranche of TARP. I did not agree with the way the first half of TARP was used, and I did not have faith that the second half would be spent in a more responsible manner, or that taxpayers would be fully protected. It passed anyway and now the Administration has a blank check – actually a stack of blank checks – to use TARP as a revolving fund for risky experiments in nationalizing private enterprise. As of right now, there are no checks and balances planned before we dole out $30 billion more to GM. My bill would ensure that Congress provides the oversight we were elected to deliver. It asks only for a simple majority, applying the regular rules of the Senate. But, it makes a very significant statement that Congress has not fallen asleep at the switch. We must fulfill our duty to provide checks and balances to the executive branch - as our Constitution demands. Whether my fellow senators support or oppose funds for private industry, they should support this bill to reclaim Congress’ role in the operations of our government.  Email This Email This  Print This Print This



    From Government Bytes

    TARP - A Big (Really, Really Big) Mistake

    Posted by Government Bytes | 10 Jun

    An appropriately titled column ("The $787 Billion Mistake") on TARP at Forbes.com.  Email This Email This  Print This Print This



    From Government Bytes

    “Bailout” for Transportation Agencies?

    Posted by Government Bytes | 05 Jun

    CQ.com is reporting the following: "Passenger rail and bus advocates are pressing conferees on the war supplemental bill to include a Senate-passed provision that would allow public transit agencies to spend some of their stimulus dollars on operating expenses, instead of capital improvements." According to the article, transit agencies received $8.4 billion in stimulus funds. Does this not sound like a bailout in the making: "Many transit agencies are facing budget deficits that leave them unable to keep up with dramatic increases in ridership. As a result, service and personnel cuts are being proposed in cities across the country."  Email This Email This  Print This Print This



    From Government Bytes

    Looking Out for Our “Investment”

    Posted by Government Bytes | 03 Jun

    Following on Ross's post from yesterday regarding Government Motors, Illinois Senator Dick Durbin wants to protect "our" investment. From CQ.com: "I have some concerns about things that have been expressed in bankruptcy courts, and I’m going to explore those," Senate Majority Whip Richard J. Durbin told reporters, referring to the recent government-guided bankruptcy of General Motors Corp., which will give the federal government a 60-percent stake in the once-mighty automaker. "But this is new territory for most of us — to think that the American people are the majority owners of a major corporation — and, as the president said, we don’t want to be too involved in the day-to-day business of this company. We also want to make sure that our investment in General Motors is going to be protected," the Illinois Democrat said. If you've read Ross's piece at Human Events, you know that Durbin has his work cut out for him. On a related note, the happy go-lucky folks at Despair.com, bring you Government Motors: An AmeriKan Revolution. Standard disclaimer: Of course, this blog doesn't officially endorse products or beg for swag, but if you buy anything from Despair.com you might keep them off of a future bailout list. And, if the unkind folks at Despair.com were to read this post, I'm a medium.  Email This Email This  Print This Print This



    From Government Bytes

    Government Motors

    Posted by Government Bytes | 02 Jun

    For those of you interested in my view on GM's bankruptcy and the future emergence of Government Motors, please see my article at HumanEvents.com. (My agreement with Human Events does not permit me to post the text of the article here.)see “GM Bankrupt: Obama Takes Over", Ross Kaminsky, HumanEvents.com, 6/1/09 http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=32085  Email This Email This  Print This Print This



    From Government Bytes

    NTU Vote Alert: Housing Bill Amendments

    Posted by Government Bytes | 04 May

    ****************************************** National Taxpayers Union Vote Alert NTU urges all Senators to vote “YES” on Amendments #1016 and #1026 to the Housing Bill, S. 896. Offered by Senators Vitter and DeMint, respectively, these amendments would add some sorely needed taxpayer protections to the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), which has been a miserable failure so far. Senator Vitter's Amendment #1016 would simply allow banks that are properly capitalized to return TARP funds to the Treasury (and thus, the American taxpayer) without huge amounts of red tape. This no-brainer of an amendment would ensure that taxpayer dollars are not trapped by bureaucratic strictures in businesses that don’t need them. Senator DeMint's Amendment #1026 would put the brakes on the appalling trend toward nationalization of the banking sector by preventing the federal government from using TARP funds to purchase common stock in failing businesses. "YES" votes on Amendments #1016 and #1026 to the Housing Bill are the pro-taxpayer positions and will be significantly weighted in our annual Rating of Congress. If you have any questions, please contact NTU Director of Government Affairs Andrew Moylan at (703) 683-5700 ******************************************  Email This Email This  Print This Print This



    From Government Bytes

    No more bailouts, Br’er Durbin?!?

    Posted by Government Bytes | 03 May

    Last week brought a rare victory for the free markets and the sanctity of private contracts: By a 51-45 vote, the Senate defeated a measure championed by Democratic Senator Dick Durbin (Illinois) which would have allowed judges to reduce the principle amount of a mortgage on a primary residence during a bankruptcy proceeding. Twelve Democrats, including Arlen Specter, voted against the plan. The idea was typical Democrat fare, representing a complete lack of understanding of the importance of contracts. Can you imagine the chilling effect on the mortgage industry if lenders had to figure into their interest rate determinations the probability that they would be forced by judges to lose money on loans? If you were a bank and you knew that some percentage of your loan portfolio would be forced into greater-than-necessary losses by judges, you would have to increase the interest rate you charge on every loan – or at least every loan to people who don’t have absolutely stellar credit – in order to make sure you’re maintaining the return on capital you need to justify being in business. In other words, Durbin’s program would have made home ownership more difficult for millions of moderate income earners who would be trying to buy a home, often a first home, in order to let judges interfere in the voluntarily-made contracts between a much smaller number of prior home buyers and lenders. Durbin’s plan was thus not actually an attempt to help the housing market (as if that were a proper role of government anyway) as much as it was another step toward government involvement in and control of as much of our economic lives as possible. This is the true goal of today’s Democratic Party and the common thread among all their economic policies. There was an important lesson during the discussions between Durbin and the industry: The only bank to support the plan was Citigroup, i.e. the recipient of the most TARP money, a company which gave 61% of its 2008 political contributions to Democrats, and a company which, because of its soon-to-be-completed conversion of preferred equity to common stock, will be 36% owned by the Federal Government. They do us the occasional courtesy of saying the stake will be “taxpayer owned”, but we all know just how much respect we-the-people will garner during closed-door discussions of how the bank should operate, which is to say none at all. This unholy alliance between the federal government and the corporate Board Room is the essence of economic fascism. Citigroup’s behavior certainly pleased Durbin; it would have pleased Mussolini as well. The company’s support of a plan which would likely be a negative for its shareholders but pleasing to its left-wing political champions is a stark reminder that government “bailouts”, particularly when ongoing participation is clearly, despite all administration rhetoric, not intended to be temporary, is an unvarnished disaster for the principles of economic liberty and the realities of day to day life in a free-market system. So, as if the defeat of Durbin’s ill-conceived plan weren’t a tasty enough meal for a starved minority of congressional fiscal conservatives, Durbin himself offered a delicious dessert: According to a Roll Call story, Durbin said the following on the Senate floor following defeat of his measure: “This Senator wants to put the banking interests on notice. I am not going to be a party to shoveling billions more in taxpayers’ dollars your way if you won’t lift a finger to help these people who are facing foreclosure across America today.” What? No more bailouts?!? Please, Br’er Durbin, don’t throw us into that briar patch! In a sense, I understand Durbin’s frustration: Anyone who gives enormous amounts of money to a corporation expects some level of influence over that corporation, roughly proportionate to the size of the financial contribution. The problem is that the investor/lender in this case is the government, and that changes everything. Since the money government hands out in bailouts isn’t actually the politicians’ money, the politicians’ goals could frequently be antithetical to building shareholder value. As Milton Friedman warned, there’s no less responsible spender of money than someone who is spending someone else’s money on things to benefit yet another party. A spends B’s money on C….do you think A or C really care about B? And YOU are B. Durbin is frustrated that his support of bank bailouts didn’t make him the Senate’s effective bank czar, with recipients of his largesse (in the form of our money) groveling at his feet, willing to accede to demands – demands which non-government investors would never make – that would diminish the companies’ profitability. Many banks took TARP money, but only Citigroup – the sole bank likely to have massive government ownership of voting stock – caved in to Durbin’s pressure. Other banks realized that their primary duty is to their shareholders. Citi decided that sucking on the teat of the TARP is more important than their bottom line or their fiduciary responsibility. Alternatively, maybe their decision to fawn at Durbin’s feet was made considering their financial situation, leaving one to wonder about Citigroup’s financial stability. I don’t believe that Senator Durbin won’t support giving taxpayer money to banks or other corporations in the future. Instead, he’ll just work to ensure that his ability to control those corporations is cemented before he’ll sign off on any deal. The good news is that corporations have seen the true nature of these bailouts: When you make a deal with the devil, you’re always the junior partner.  Email This Email This  Print This Print This



    What is BeyondBailouts.org?

    BeyondBailouts.org is a joint venture of the National Taxpayers Union (NTU) and Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI). The purpose of the website is to educate about government’s role in our current financial difficulties, suggest reforms that address those root causes, and provide a clearinghouse for the latest analysis of the financial crisis. But most of all, it’s an outlet for Americans to contact their Members of Congress and the Administration to express their frustration.

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