Throwing Good Money...

By Nomi Prins

This article appeared in the January 5, 2009 edition of The Nation.

December 17, 2008

Three months ago, the country was galled by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson's offhand request that taxpayers hand over billions to a tanking financial sector with no strings attached. Lawmakers keen on salvaging the bailout rushed to add amendments intended to ensure proper oversight of the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). The bill that passed established a Congressional Oversight Panel, a tiny, underresourced but committed watchdog team that on December 10 issued its first report in the form of Questions About the $700 Billion Emergency Economic Stabilization Funds. The panel wrote, "We are here to ask the questions that we believe all Americans have a right to ask: who got the money, what have they done with it, how has it helped the country, and how has it helped ordinary people?"

So far, the answers are: the banks that made billions and risked more; they've stockpiled capital injections in reserves while withholding credit; and it hasn't helped any ordinary people. The Government Accountability Office put it bluntly: "Treasury has not yet set up policies and procedures to help ensure that [TARP] funds are being used as intended."

The fact is, no accountability is possible until the recipients of the bailout funds are forced to operate with the transparency that democracy requires--and this goes for TARP benefits as well as for other aid. There's a shroud of secrecy around the loan facilities set up by the Federal Reserve and other Treasury Department measures (together totaling more than $7 trillion) now propping up Wall Street. In return for loans, the Fed has taken on nearly $3 trillion in credit-risky collateral, including subprime and other underwater asset-backed securities like lower-standard mortgages, small-business loans and securitized credit card payments, none of which can be sold into the capital markets. In addition, Treasury agreed to back $1.4 trillion of FDIC guarantees if needed, and Congress voted to back a half-trillion of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and FHA mortgages. Cash injections and backups have become regular features of federal banking policy.

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About Nomi Prins

Nomi Prins is a senior fellow at Demos, a nonpartisan public policy think tank. Before becoming a journalist, she served as a managing director for Goldman Sachs in New York. She is the author of Other People's Money: The Corporate Mugging of America, Jacked: How "Conservatives" Are Picking Your Pocket and It Takes a Pillage: Behind the Bailouts, Bonuses, and Backroom Deals From Washington to Wall Street. She is a frequent commentator on CNBC and the BBC. more...
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