Under the Bush team a prominent and profitable bank, under threat of a damaging public audit, was forced to accept less than $1 billion of TARP money. The government insisted on buying a new class of preferred stock which gave it a tiny, minority position. The money flowed to the bank. Arguably, back then, the Bush administration was acting for purely economic reasons. It wanted to recapitalize the banks to halt a financial panic.Nice mafia-style method of operating, there: making the banks a deal they can't refuse. At this point, everything is a Federal matter. And that's what IS the matter.Fast forward to today, and that same bank is begging to give the money back. The chairman offers to write a check, now, with interest. He's been sitting on the cash for months and has felt the dead hand of government threatening to run his business and dictate pay scales. He sees the writing on the wall and he wants out. But the Obama team says no, since unlike the smaller banks that gave their TARP money back, this bank is far more prominent. The bank has also been threatened with "adverse" consequences if its chairman persists. That's politics talking, not economics.
Monday, April 06, 2009
Not a loan, but a leash
Yet more confirmation that all this money Uncle Sam's throwing around is less about sound economic policy than it is consolidating control of all the potential levers of influence in this country:
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