Not good news for the Nationalization Argument


From The American Prospect today.  Make of the hard news what you will, and the commentary if that grabs you one way or the other.

March 20, 2009

 

THE COSTS OF TEMPORARY NATIONALIZATION.*

Today, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation announced the sale of Indymac Federal, which was once Indymac Bank until it went under and the FDIC took it over in order to protect depositors. Following standard procedures, the feds managed the bank -- in the process learning a thing or two about loan modification -- attempted to clear the balance sheets, and ultimately sold the company back into private hands. At a $10.7 billion loss. Losses on that scale -- Indymac was a much smaller bank than those causing real problems in the economy -- are a main concern of more aggressive government intervention. But compared to the costs, both to the institutions and the economy as a whole, of maintaining "zombie banks," the current practice, or even the still vague plan to produce a public-private market to price "toxic" assets, those kind of losses could look increasingly acceptable. With even former McCain adviser Doug Holtz-Eakin is now advocating seizure, reorganization and sale, policymakers are hopefully converging on some kind of nationalization as the ideal solution. But given the size and complexity of the task, I'd be lying if I said I wasn't nervous.

-- Tim Fernholz

 

"The Coming Conservative Crack-Up"


Gibson/Palin discussion of Iraq - clip from BBC News


Words fail me.  What do you think?

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7611638.stm

Results of Early Palin Poll


From Tapped at The American Prospect:

The blogosphere has been awash in suggestions that Sarah Palin will be widely viewed as politically inexperienced, a lightweight beauty queen, and even a bad mother. But today polling is out, and it shows Palin has made a great first impression on the American public; she is viewed favorably by 78 percent of Republicans, 26 percent of Democrats and 63 percent of unaffiliated voters. Compare that to a roll-out favorability rating of just 43 percent for Joe Biden. Women seem to be more skeptical of Palin than men, but that is to be expected; on average, women are more skeptical of all conservative politicians and policies than men are.

CNN calls it.


Breaking News CNN confirms Sen. Barack Obama has chosen Delaware Sen. Joe Biden to be his vice-presidential running mate.Get Breaking News by e-mail

Obama responds to Annie Oakley


anna am

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