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Bailout Plan: Trust But Verify

Bernanke is asking for trust he has not earned. Here's a shortlist of conditions to make this a credible deal.

James K. Galbraith and William K. Black

September 23, 2008

“These are the days of miracles and wonders…” The market has collapsed, only the government can save us now. Thirty years of cant have evaporated. Suddenly, we’re all in it together–Henry Paulson and Ben Bernanke in the lead, Congress pulling like post-partisan galley slaves, George Bush lying low and looking, no doubt fervently, for the exits.

Something must be done–but on what terms? Treasury proposes to spend $700 billion to purchase mortgage-backed securities, accountable to no one. Secretary Paulson asks for trust. But has he earned it? Remember: he started out in office gutting the Sarbanes-Oxley Act; he tried to cripple the SEC, and only two weeks ago he relied on Morgan Stanley–not a disinterested party–for advice on the nationalization of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Therefore: “Trust but verify,” as Ronald Reagan would (and did) say.

Congress must now impose conditions to protect the public, the national interest and, not least, the interests of the next administration. Herewith a short list:

1) A disclosure clause.

Treasury should have immediate and complete access to information about portfolios, counterparties, the internal valuation methods used by financial firms, their proprietary models and the history of adjustments made to those models to recognize or conceal losses as the crisis unfolded.

2) A pricing clause.

Treasury should establish a transparent mechanism to establish a before-the-bailout fair market value for mortgage-backed securities, set limits on the premium paid over that value and require that financial institutions value their full portfolios at the sale price. In other words, the practice of concealing losses–“accounting forbearance”–should be prohibited.

3) A fraud clause.

Securities purchased should be reviewed and those found to be based on fraudulent appraisals, inadequate documentation, predatory and other abusive practice should be kicked back to the lenders at a penalty rate.

4) An enforcement clause.

Treasury should be required to establish a framework for investigations and criminal referrals and to prove that the framework is in aggressive use. Participating firms should be required to investigate and document past frauds, to establish internal anti-fraud controls and make criminal referrals as necessary. The FBI and Assistant US Attorneys should get “‘blank check” authorization to pursue the crimes behind this debacle.

5) An arbitrage clause.

One big danger of Paulson’s plan is that non-US institutions, hedge funds and others will seize the chance to sell their bad holdings to eligible US institutions, replenishing the swamp just as the Treasury seeks to drain it. All US financial institutions should be required to provide baseline information on their mortgage-backed securities and other eligible holdings as of September 15, 2008.

6) A transparency clause.

Treasury operations under this plan, including communications and consultation with outside advisers, should be transparent to Congress, which should be get whatever information it wants, at regular intervals. No exceptions.

7) A crony clause.

This program must be run by people who are free of abusive conflicts of interest. To ensure this, the Treasury should require full financial disclosure for anyone hired to administer the program, and impose rules and a system to enforce a strict conflict code. Special note to Congress: John McCain personifies and embodies the crony system. Do not pass a bill that would give him, as president, unfettered control over how this program is run.

8) A modification and disposal clause.

As foreclosures mount, Treasury will end up in control of physical properties, which degrade rapidly if not sold or rented and occupied. To prevent this, a new agency should be established to rapidly modify existing mortgage contracts, to manage rental conversions and to lease, sell or demolish vacated homes. This agency can be run as draft boards were in wartime, by citizens in each community under federal guidelines.

Is this all? No, it’s only a start. Other measures must follow, including comprehensive regulatory reform, mortgage relief, revenue sharing to protect state and local public spending as property tax revenues tank, support for public capital investment and job creation. These are however the agenda for the next administration.

Getting to that next administration is the job now for the American people.

James K. GalbraithJames K. Galbraith teaches economics at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs, The University of Texas at Austin. His next book, with Jing Chen, is Entropy Economics: The Living Basis of Value and Production, forthcoming from the University of Chicago Press.


William K. BlackWilliam K. Black is author of The Best Way to Rob a Bank is to Own One. He teaches at the University of Missouri, Kansas City. A former regulator, he blew the whistle on the Keating Five.


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