The Corner: Objectively Pro-Socialist

by hilzoy K-Lo gets an email about the stock market: “OK, I’ll say it…I believe today’s massive decline was, in part (and maybe a big “in part”), in fear that the debate tonight won’t go well for McCain and the implications that will have for an Obama victory. The likelihood of a recession has been … Read more

It’s Going To Get Ugly

by hilzoy Nouriel Roubini, sunny as ever: “Nouriel Roubini, the professor who predicted the financial crisis in 2006, said the U.S. will suffer its worst recession in 40 years, driving the stock market lower after it rallied the most in seven decades yesterday. “There are significant downside risks still to the market and the economy,” … Read more

Perspective

by hilzoy From the Detroit Free Press (h/t): “The median price on a house or condo sold in Detroit last month plummeted 57%, to $9,250, from $21,250 a year ago, according to figures released Monday by Realcomp, a multiple listing service based in Farmington Hills. Foreclosures represented two-thirds of sales in Detroit in September, and … Read more

Bailout 2.0

by hilzoy

Huggyhank

From the WSJ:

“The U.S. government is expected to take stakes in nine of the nation’s top financial institutions as part of a new plan to restore confidence to the battered U.S. banking system, a far-reaching effort that puts the government’s guarantee behind the basic plumbing of financial markets.

To kick off Tuesday’s expected announcement, the government is set to buy preferred equity stakes in Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., Bank of America Corp. — including the soon-to-be acquired Merrill Lynch — Citigroup Inc., Wells Fargo & Co., Bank of New York Mellon and State Street Corp., according to people familiar with the matter. (…)

Other elements of the plan, which will be announced Tuesday morning, include: equity investments in possibly thousands of other banks; lifting the cap on deposit insurance for certain bank accounts, such as those used by small businesses; and guaranteeing certain types of bank lending. It builds on an earlier plan to buy up rotten assets dragging down banks, which failed to calm investor fears, and follows similar moves by major European countries.

Formulated jointly by the Treasury Department, the Federal Reserve and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., these moves are designed to keep money flowing through the financial system, ensuring that banks continue lending to companies, consumers and each other. A freeze in these markets rippled through the economy and helped cause stocks to crater last week.

Along with the government’s involvement come certain restrictions, such as caps on executive pay. For example, firms can’t write new employment contracts containing golden parachutes and their ability to use certain executive salaries as a tax deduction is capped. These restrictions are relatively weak compared with what congressional Democrats had wanted when they approved this spending, a potential flash point.”

Two big caveats before I go on. First, this reporting is preliminary; the report tomorrow should have more details. Second, I am not an economist, so take my opinion for what little it’s worth. That said:

This sounds a lot better than the original plan to buy up troubled assets. In fact, it sounds so good to Brad DeLong that he wants to start singing hymns of praise in Latin. And that’s a wonderful thing. So this post is not meant to detract from the fact that as best I can tell, this is a very, very good thing.

However, I note a couple of things that have generally been part of discussions of this kind of plan. First, there is no triage: no attempt to separate banks that are basically solvent from banks that are not. Second, there are no forced writedowns. I would have thought that either would be a very good idea, under the circumstances.

One of the things you really, really want, under the circumstances, is for everyone to know that the banks are now trustworthy: that no more big unpleasant surprises lurk in their balance sheets. One of the things that I gather you do not want is for banks to put off unpleasant revelations as long as possible. To do this, people seem to think that one should figure out which banks are insolvent, “and like Old Yeller, “gently” put them down.” Then:

“Before they get new equity, banks must be forced to write down the value of their assets to nuclear-winter levels. And they must disclose, in detail, the carrying value of their assets so the market can make sure they have done this.

Why?

Because the goal of investing taxpayer equity in banks is threefold:

*Improve the banks’ capital ratios, so they can start lending again

*Persuade private investors to invest in banks again

*Flush all the crap so we can start fresh…unlike Japan.

If the government does not force banks to write down their assets before injecting new equity, we won’t have fixed the problem. Instead, the US taxpayer will just be the lastest sucker to fall for the banks’ assertions that all the bad news is out of the way. Private investors, meanwhile, will stay on the sidelines and watch the taxpayer get sandbagged. Lastly, and most importantly (for the economy), banks won’t start lending again. Why not? Because they’ll want to keep all that new capital as a cushion for the next wave of writedowns.

Japanese banks played this game for a decade…and we know where it got them (NIKKEI Index is currently one-fifth of the peak value 18 years ago.) In Sweden, meanwhile, the government insisted on writedowns, and the economy recovered almost immediately.”

I suspect that Paulson and others in the administration have a hard time accepting the need for this sort of policy. They are, after all, conservatives, and this is, after all, partial nationalization of banks. But if my reading is correct, hanging back is a bad idea. If you’re going to do this sort of thing, you should be quick and aggressive about it. As I understand it, that’s the best way both the get the economy back on its feet and to get the government out of the banking business as quickly as possible.

But for all that, the plan sounds like a big step in the right direction.

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Cut Him Loose

by hilzoy One of the nice things about watching the Republicans crash and burn is that we can learn from their mistakes rather than repeating them. It’s a pity Tim Mahoney doesn’t seem to have taken advantage of this opportunity: “The Democrat who replaced disgraced Florida Rep. Mark Foley — running on a pledge to … Read more

“Just Where We Want Them”

by hilzoy John McCain on the Obama campaign: “My friends, we’ve got them just where we want them.” That’s like the captain of the Titanic saying he had the iceberg just where he wanted it: Seriously, though: when politicians lie, they normally try to say things that are somewhat plausible. Does John McCain actually expect … Read more

“Weird In A Positive Way”

by hilzoy From the NYT’s Economix: “Paul Krugman, a professor at Princeton University and an Op-Ed columnist for The New York Times, was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Science on Monday. “It’s been an extremely weird day, but weird in a positive way,” Mr. Krugman said in an interview on his way to … Read more

We Report; You Decide

by hilzoy

TPM has a post about Fox’s recent documentary about Obama. I was dimly aware of it, but I didn’t know that when Andy Martin appeared on Fox, he claimed that Obama “had once trained to overthrow the [US] government.” I went and looked up the transcript on Lexis/Nexis, and post the relevant parts below. But first, a bit of background on Andy Martin:

“A quick word about Andy Martin. During a 1983 bankruptcy case he referred to a federal judge as a “crooked, slimy Jew, who has a history of lying and thieving common to members of his race.” Martin, who in the past was known as Anthony Martin-Trigona, is one of the most notorious litigants in the history of the United States. He’s filed hundreds, possibly thousands, of lawsuits, often directed at judges who have ruled against him, or media outlets that cover him unfavorably. A 1993 opinion by the US Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, in Atlanta, described these lawsuits as “a cruel and effective weapon against his enemies,” and called Martin a “notoriously vexatious and vindictive litigator who has long abused the American legal system.” He once even attempted to intervene in the divorce proceedings of a judge who’d ruled against him, petitioning the state court to be appointed as the guardian of the judge’s children.”

That’s Chris Hayes, from the Nation. You can see some of the rulings in a few of Martin’s court cases here (check out footnotes 3 and 4) and here. The last contains one of Martin’s complaints, which I excerpt below the fold, so that you can see who we’re dealing with.

Now for the transcript. It’s from Hannity’s America, ‘Obama And Friends: A History Of Radicalism’, aired on Oct. 5. (Video here.)

“HANNITY: In 1985, fresh from Columbia University Obama returned to Chicago to become just that, a community organizer, a job he says qualifies him in part to hold a nation’s highest office. What exactly is a community organizer? After all, he didn’t know what it was when he started as one.

ANDY MARTIN, AUTHOR AND JOURNALIST: I think a community organizer in Barack Obama’s case was somebody that was in training for a radical overthrow of the government. You have to really stretch to believe his story that he was living in New York City. He was earning 50,000 to 60,000 a year. And he left this to come to Chicago, to a city where he knew no one, to suddenly start, quote, “organizing,” unquote, people.

In my opinion, Barack Obama had already been influenced by his radical ideology and philosophy, probably had met William Ayers in New York and was coming here to lay the foundations for what he thought would be some sort of a political movement that he would be a part of.

My view is that the community organizing was actually kind of sham event that really Bill Ayers was testing him. Because the way these radicals work, they don’t give you a big project until you pass muster with a small project. And so they sent him out to Chicago to see what he would do. He passed the test.

OBAMA: And I decided to become a community organizer. I organized black folks at the grassroots. It was in these neighborhoods I received the best education that I ever had.

MARTIN: He had virtually no impact in his so-called community organizing career except to lay the foundation for his future radical associations. It was then also I believe that he was exposed perhaps by Louis Farrakhan to Kahlid al-Mansour. Because while he was a community organizer that Khalid al-Mansour starts raising money to promote Obama to Harvard Law School.

So obviously, in Ayers’ mind and al-Mansour’s mind, Obama had proven his reliability. He was somebody that could be trusted to do what he was told. And all of a sudden, they now are going to take him to the next level. All that comes out of the years in Chicago. Obama wasn’t organizing a community. He was organizing his career and organizing his life’s step to the next level. That’s all he did in Chicago.”

I see. Obama “probably” met William Ayers in New York, and followed him to Chicago, where he could be groomed for higher things, and subjected to “tests”. That makes perfect sense. Also, someone with an Arab name starts “raising money to promote Obama to Harvard Law School”, apparently under the misapprehension that you can buy your way in. It’s all a very clever ploy, because somehow — via communications from the spirit plane? a Ouija board? — Ayers et at knew that Obama would end up running for high office, and winning.

Right.

Sometimes people describe Fox News as a sort of antidote to more liberal news stations. That’s not true. When CNN airs a “documentary” that presents, unchallenged, claims that John McCain is running a child porn ring from one of his seven houses, we can talk about equivalence. Until then, we have several news networks, but Fox is not among them.

As noted above, I put excerpts from some of Martin’s filings below the fold. I thought it might be a good idea to provide some context that would allow you to assess his credibility. If crazed and ugly anti-Semitic ravings upset you, do not read them.

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Document The Atrocities

by hilzoy Today’s stupid fake equivalency comes from Cokie Roberts on ABC’S This Week (video). The exchange that follows comes from 3:36 before the end: “Krugman: This is not just about McCain and what he did. The fact of the matter is, for a long time we have had a substantial fraction of the Republican … Read more

Uh Oh …

by hilzoy The IMF agrees with Nouriel Roubini: “The IMF warned on Saturday that the global financial system was on the brink of meltdown, while France and Germany pushed ahead with a pan-European crisis response to try to prevent the worst global downturn in decades. At a joint news conference, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and … Read more

And Speaking Of Incoherent Policy…

by hilzoy No sooner did I finish my last post than I found this, from Politico: “As part of a plan to reinvigorate his flagging campaign, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) is considering additional economic measures aimed directly at the middle class that are likely to be rolled out this week, campaign officials said. Among the … Read more

Do I Contradict Myself? Very Well Then I Contradict Myself.

by hilzoy Here’s a peculiar piece from the NYT: “At the presidential debate in Nashville last Tuesday, Senator John McCain made his case for fiscally conservative, smaller government, calling for an “across the board” spending freeze and denouncing what he described as Senator Barack Obama’s “government will do this and government will do that” approach … Read more

The Palin Report

by hilzoy I have read through the first 81 pages of the Troopergate report (pdf). (If you want to cut to the chase, read the findings, p. 8, and the explanation of the first finding, pp. 48-68.) The NYT summarizes: “Gov. Sarah Palin abused the powers of her office by pressuring subordinates to try to … Read more

McCain Blames Self For Economic Meltdown

by hilzoy And he even says he did it on purpose! Just look: John McCain, yesterday: “The fact is, that the same people that are now claiming credit for this rescue are the same ones that were willing co-conspirators causing these problems we are in.” Politico, “McCain claims bailout credit”, Sept. 28, 2008: “Previewing a … Read more

Temper, Temper

by hilzoy Here’s a story about John McCain’s temper (h/t): “McCain’s game is craps. So is Jeff Dearth’s. Jeff was at the table when McCain showed up and happily made room for him. Apparently there is some kind of rule or tradition in craps that everyone’s hands are supposed to be above the table when … Read more

Taking On His Party

by hilzoy One of the things that has annoyed me during this campaign is how easy it has been for candidates to simply make things up about one another’s records, even when they are talking about topics that are relatively easy to check. Last spring, people kept saying that Obama had no real accomplishments in … Read more

Round The Bend

by hilzoy The crowd at The Corner seems to have gone well and truly insane. It all starts when David Frum asks: “Does anybody really seriously believe that Barack Obama is a secret left-wing radical? And if not, then what is this fuss and fury supposed to show?” There follow a series of posts at … Read more

Debate: Reaction

by hilzoy I thought Obama won this one — he was more fluid and fluent and confident, and McCain sounded tired to me. That said, I didn’t think it was a blowout. But it didn’t need to be. McCain is the one who needs to shake up the race; Obama just needs to solidify is … Read more

Justice Delayed, But Justice Nonetheless

by hilzoy From the Washington Post: “A federal judge today ordered that 17 Chinese Muslims held at the Guantanamo Bay military prison be released into the United States by Friday, agreeing with the detainees’ attorneys that the Constitution bars holding the men indefinitely without cause. It was the first time that a U.S. court has … Read more

Decadence And Dishonor

by hilzoy James Fallows: “In the short term, a worldwide financial panic and crisis. Just beyond that, the real economic and social problems that come when large numbers of people lose their jobs, their businesses, their investments, their homes, and even larger numbers become fearful about what might happen to them. And then, when we … Read more

People Who Live In Seven Glass Houses…

by hilzoy Politico: “Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) on Monday will launch a multimedia campaign to draw attention to the involvement of Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) in the “Keating Five” savings-and-loan scandal of 1989-91, which blemished McCain’s public image and set him on his course as a self-styled reformer. Pushing back against what it calls McCain’s … Read more

“He Denied It Was Racist”

by hilzoy For the most part, I try to steer away from accusations of racism. I’m usually more interested in changing people’s minds, and that tends not to happen when I call them racists, since they suddenly feel the need to convince me that they are not, in fact, about to excuse themselves for a … Read more

Economists On The Candidates

by hilzoy From The Economist: “A survey of academic economists by The Economist finds the majority — at times by overwhelming margins — believe Mr Obama has the superior economic plan, a firmer grasp of economics and will appoint better economic advisers. (…) Eighty per cent of respondents and no fewer than 71% of those … Read more

Mark To Market

by hilzoy One of the stranger aspects of the debate over the bailout was the way both progressives and conservatives latched onto the idea of suspending mark to market accounting. (The final bailout bill (pdf) reiterated that the head of the SEC had the power to do this (sec. 132), and called for a study … Read more

I Can Hardly Wait, She Lied

by hilzoy The Washington Post has an article called “McCain Plans Fiercer Strategy Against Obama”: “Sen. John McCain and his Republican allies are readying a newly aggressive assault on Sen. Barack Obama’s character, believing that to win in November they must shift the conversation back to questions about the Democrat’s judgment, honesty and personal associations, … Read more

Cardiac Arrest

by hilzoy Nouriel Roubini is more than usually terrifying today: “It is now clear that the US financial system — and now even the system of financing of the corporate sector — is now in cardiac arrest and at a risk of a systemic financial meltdown. I don’t use these words lightly but at this … Read more

Here And There

by hilzoy From the Washington Post: “In a dramatic reversal, the House today approved by a comfortable margin a $700 billion financial rescue package that will bring the greatest intervention of the federal government into the private marketplace since the Great Depression, attempting to prevent the economy from sliding into a deep recession. (…) President … Read more

More Random Debate Thoughts

by hilzoy I watched the debate at a party last night, so I didn’t write abut it at the time. I agree with what seems to be the consensus view: Palin exceeded expectations, such as they were; Biden won. A few random notes: First, I was struck by the moment David Kusnet describes here, in … Read more

Looking Out For Themselves

by hilzoy Apparently, yet another key McCain staffer was hired by Freddie Mac specifically to influence McCain: “When mortgage giant Freddie Mac feared several years ago that Sen. John McCain was too outspoken on the issue of executive pay, it pinpointed a lobbyist known for his closeness to McCain and hired him to work with … Read more

Abandoning Children

by hilzoy From the NYT (h/t): “The abandonments began on Sept. 1, when a mother left her 14-year-old son in a police station here. By Sept. 23, two more boys and one girl, ages 11 to 14, had been abandoned in hospitals in Omaha and Lincoln. Then a 15-year-old boy and an 11-year-old girl were … Read more

Bailout Passes Senate

by hilzoy NYT: “The Senate strongly endorsed the $700 billion economic bailout plan Wednesday, leaving backers optimistic that the easy approval, coupled with an array of popular additions, would lead to House acceptance by Friday and end the legislative uncertainty that has rocked the markets. In stark contrast to the House rejection of the plan … Read more

I Take It All Back

by hilzoy I know I’ve been pretty hard on Sarah Palin. I’ve said that I think she’s unprepared for the Presidency; I’ve made fun of the idea that she learns about other nations through osmosis; I’ve even questioned her energy expertise. I take it all back. I eat my words. I was wrong: “Couric: And … Read more