Author Topic: TARP Cost: $700 billion dollar bailout may wind up only costing $50 billion.  (Read 566 times)

tu_holmes

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Damn... Maybe I don't hate TARP anymore.



http://www.latimes.com/sns-tarp-cost,0,2432272.story

It may have staved off a financial system meltdown, but the U.S. Treasury's $700 billion bailout program is so reviled by the public that its distaste may rub off on incumbent Democrats in November elections.

What goes into the history books about the program, however, is still under debate.

As the Troubled Asset Relief Program nears its official expiration date Sunday, many may have forgotten that it was launched in the waning days of the Bush administration.

The Obama administration has been eager to remind voters of the program's early bipartisan roots and to claim victory for its stewardship of taxpayers' investments.

Ultimately, some analysts say, the program could end up costing less than $50 billion.

"I think this is the best federal program to ever be despised by the public," said Doug Elliott, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, a Washington think-tank.

"There's such a huge dichotomy between public perception and what it actually did and how little it cost. The things that people are upset about regarding the recession would have been much worse without the TARP."

Even the program's harshest critics have begrudgingly acknowledged that it was necessary -- and effective -- in preventing a major financial collapse. Some economists, such as Harvard's Kenneth Rogoff, say TARP, along with other government bailout efforts, prevented a second Great Depression.

Giving taxpayer money directly to banks was not the program's intended purpose. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and then- Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson marched into the U.S. Capitol two years ago with a $700 billion plan to buy up the toxic assets from banks that were stoking insolvency fears and choking off lending.

But this was deemed too slow and unwieldy to douse the raging firestorm in the markets and less than two weeks after Congress approved the program, Paulson pivoted to inject $125 billion in taxpayer capital directly into the top U.S. banks.

The plan worked, but the Treasury Department immediately came under fire for the move. Criticism intensified during the early days of the Obama administration after bailed out insurer American International Group disclosed massive bonuses for employees of the unit that brought the company to its knees.

The program's most fundamental problem -- and its political Achilles' heel -- was perhaps unsolvable: the inherent unfairness of bailing out the financial executives whose reckless decisions put the entire economy at risk.

But another key problem, according to former International Monetary Fund chief economist Simon Johnson, was that the terms for the banks were far too easy -- the top bankers all kept their jobs, and most of them kept their bonus structures.

"TARP was a giveaway," Johnson said. Echoing many critics, he argues the program cemented the perception that some firms were too big to fail and would always be saved by the government -- a perception he believes will persist despite an effort to address the problem with an overhaul of financial regulations.

But Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is determined to portray TARP in heroic terms. During a congressional hearing last week, he thanked both Republicans and Democrats for approving the program.

"I know a lot of people who voted for TARP decided later that they had to distance themselves from that vote by disparaging the programs, but they should be proud of the votes they cast -- they were on the right side of history," he said.

The Treasury Department is expected to announce within days a plan to convert the preferred shares it holds in AIG into common stock it can sell over time. Geithner could then argue taxpayers may well profit from what was universally regarded as the most distasteful bailout of the financial crisis.

Soon after, the Treasury is likely to issue a revised estimate of the ultimate cost of TARP to taxpayers, an estimate that has steadily shrunk over time.

It already is claiming that its main bank rescue effort, the $205 billion Capital Purchase Program, will earn a profit, even though many small banks are having a hard time repaying.

From original projections of more than $500 billion, the Obama administration has estimated TARP's net cost at around $105 billion, with the bailouts of AIG and automakers each costing about $30 billion and housing rescue programs also weighing.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office forecasts a $66 billion loss, and some analysts have said the ultimate loss could come in under $50 billion. Most of this would come from efforts to modify mortgages that offer no opportunity for recovery.

Comparatively, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp a decade ago estimated the total taxpayer cost of resolving the savings and loan crisis in the 1980s and 1990s at about $153 billion.

Getting the money back could help foster a more nostalgic view of TARP, said Elliott, a former JPMorgan investment banker.

"The public had it in their minds that this was $700 billion that was just flushed down the toilet," he said. "The best hope for TARP supporters is that in the gaze of history, this looks like it was the right thing to do."
Copyright © 2010, Reuters

whork25

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3337something what is your take on this?

GigantorX

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It doesn't matter. It could have made "us" money but it set another awful precedent in a line of awful precedents in this area. The major financial institutions were allowed to duck their responsibility of dealing with their failings and instead were rewarded with almost a trillion dollars in tax payer money. It allowed them to further consolidate their power and hold on this nation and TARP solved absolutely nothing expect set the stage for an even bigger implosion down the road. They are responsible for 40% of our GDP and they produce nothing of tangible value...that will only rise now. Not good.

The major institutions should have been punished like the bad economic players should be punished, they should have been broken up to restore competitive balance. That didn't happen. They were rewarded handsomely, they had to show up for a bunch of non-serious show trials to speak to and take questions from the very Congressmen that helped set the stage for the collapse and have no idea about what went on.

"We" could have made 100 billion off of TARP, the fact is "we" would never see any of the money, ever.

whork25

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The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." -
  --  Thomas Jefferson


The tyrants being the companies that recieved the bailout and the politicians that gave it to them.

These people are traitors to the country and its people and should be prosecuted as such.

While we discuss liberal vs Conservative, left vs right etc these people is fucking everybody over.

With all these guns floating around why arent somebody taking the law into their own hands?

Soul Crusher

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3337something what is your take on this?

All these numbers are hocus pocus just like the UE data. 

And like G said - it was completely reckless and we still are on the hook for Too big Too Fail. 

BM OUT

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One thing for certain.TARP was far more successfull then the utter,absolute failed stimulus plan which was 800 billion thrown into the toilet.