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by Laaw
3813 days ago
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No one said or implied any of what you're saying. Did we or did we not get more money back from the banks than we gave? That was the question, and the answer was we did. No one's making value judgements about that, it's just a statement of undeniably true fact. That is the literal definition of profit, and the US government made a profit on the loan. |
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Please see any [1] of [2] these [3] to understand why it isn't as simple as "Y - X > 0", considering things like where the repayments are coming from, comparing the nominal annualized return to Treasury bond rates, all the fraud that will never be accounted for, etc., etc. Even pro-bailout articles [4] have to include weasel phrases like "on a risk-adjusted basis, even [such and such proposed Y - X] isn’t that big a profit, given the huge downside the government had," speaking directly to my point of how it's hard to properly account for risk, which is what any other lender would have done. Arguably, since there weren't any competitors to the US government for providing bailout money, the interest rate we use to judge whether it was "profitable" should be sky high.
[1]: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/395822/overselling-tar...
[2]: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/04/25/tarp-profit-a-myth_...
[3]: http://www.forbes.com/sites/halahtouryalai/2012/04/25/dont-b...
[4]: https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/bailout-high...