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by autokad
4192 days ago
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I'm sorry but you are wrong. The market wasn't buying anything, period. Trying to fall back on the 'as it had been so many times throughout US History' is also wrong, as History, specifically the great depression, has shown us: no. At that time, there were no willing buyers (of toxic assets or banks otherwise), and if things progressed there would be no willing buyers. Tarp both directly and indirectly included the autos. Directly, because the auto bailout was funded under tarp, and indirectly because the way cars are sold - through loans, was about to be a broken process. if you remember, companies were no longer processing orders of auto parts companies unless they were paying in cash, for fear they might go under. The same situation happened in the banks. if the autos had gone, just that alone would have added another 2 million to unemployment in a month. Ford, the healthiest of the autos would have gone under too - as the companies that made GM and Christler's parts also made theirs. This alone would have destroyed the world economy for decades, let alone the financials all going kaput all at once. there were aspects of TARP that could have been implemented better, such as stipulations on c suite bonnuses, but overall TARP was needed or else we would be in a really bad place right now. |
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There were in fact willing buyers after the great depression. You're admitting I'm right by pointing out the great depression: all of those assets were eventually purchased by the market, that's a tremendous example of what I'm talking about. The only thing you can say is: it took too long, but that's merely an opinion. Besides, the government not only caused the great depression, but then made it much worse. I'd argue the market would have corrected dramatically faster had the government & Fed not screwed things up so massively.
The problem in this case was the market price would have bankrupted the banks that were sitting on worthless loans. And the price deterioration in the housing market from the sinking toxic assets would have wiped out trillions in wealth for the middle class.