The Washington Post and Peter Peterson: Two More Reasons to Oppose This Bailout
Before anyone has any idea how much a bailout might cost, before we even know what the bailout will look like, the enemies of Social Security and Medicare are already using the bailout as a pretext to cut these and other essential programs. Earlier this week, the Washington Post ran a front page "news" article that essentially demanded that the presidential candidates put forward a schedule of spending cuts and tax increases to pay for the bailout. Peter Peterson's crew has also been banging the same drum.
The reality is that a bailout is likely to be expensive, but it does not create a whole new budget world.
The relevant measure is the debt to GDP ratio. If the sum total of bailout expenses comes to $750 billion, this adds approximately 5 percentage points to our debt to GDP ratio. That's not trivial, but it's less than the impact of a typical recession, which also leads to larger deficits (of course this expense is coming in addition to the impact of a recession). While we should be looking to make up the cost of any bailout, ideally from the Wall Street crew that forced the spending, we are not yet at the edge of bankruptcy as the Social Security cutters want to claim.
The dishonesty of the Post-Peterson crew suggests another reason for extreme caution with the bailout. We could finding ourselves handing over $700 billion to the Wall Street crew one day and then fighting to protect Social Security and Medicare the next. In effect this would mean taking money from the people who were the victims of the housing bubble (people who saw most of their wealth disappear in the collapse of the house bubble) and giving it to those responsible for the bubble.
However perverse the logic of the Post-Peterson crew, they have enormous power and influence, and access to the media. Therefore they are formidable force.
Of course if the Post had opened its pages to those warning of the housing bubble 5-6 years ago, instead of just being a mouthpiece for the bubble promoters, we might not be in this mess. But this is a battle about politics and power, not justice. Bringing the economy into a disaster and then using the wreckage as weapon against their critics is the modus operandi of this crew.














Tax hikes and spending cuts to pay for the bailout? What complete BS. If they're going to take money from me and hand it to Wall Street they need to figure out how they're going to compensate me for it. There should be some promise of a dividend based on any profits that might arise from equity stakes that they take in these firms. Tax increases and spending cuts should be off the table. If we're going to invest in Wall Street then intention should be to use profits from it to fund a new entitlement.
September 25, 2008 9:05 AM | Reply | Permalink
So because Wall Street financial firms and the regulatory agencies of our government screwed up, the same idiots who allowed that will use the deficit it creates to demand cuts to Social Security and other social programs.
I don't think so.
That is effectively taking money from people who have the least of any Americans, who have nothing to do with this, to cover the losses of those who have the most.
This is the definition of a republican or conservative brain fart.
September 25, 2008 9:07 AM | Reply | Permalink
If you're such a fan of limits on executive compensation, why not engage Pete Peterson and Steve Schwartzman (both of Blackstone) on the subject and suggest they return the billions in pay into the rescue plan.
September 25, 2008 9:41 AM | Reply | Permalink
The dishonesty of the Post-Peterson crew . . . However perverse the logic of the Post-Peterson crew . . . if the Post had opened its pages . . . . Dean Baker
Tough livin' in that Washington beltway bubble, ain't it Dean?
My advice: When you're down and feeling low, just close your eyes and summon up a memory of Woodward and Bernstein. You'll feel so much better.
September 25, 2008 11:02 AM | Reply | Permalink
Speak in haste. Regret at leisure. My apologies.
Bernstein is still human, but I think the pod people got Woodward. I just get Stoned (I. F. only).
September 25, 2008 9:33 PM | Reply | Permalink