海角大神

Bailout Deal or No Deal?

Deal or no deal?

As a game show, it鈥檚 a winner. The sight of contestants guessing which briefcase (or box) has the six-figure sum has grabbed audiences on both sides of the pond. As a way of saving the US financial system, it鈥檚 proving just as compelling to watch George Bush and Henry Paulson line up the boxes and see if they can find the one with $700 billion underneath.

So far, so bad.

Last night鈥檚 failure to settle on a box, coupled with another big bank failure (Washington Mutual), sent stock markets here in Europe and in Asia reeling again Friday as investors fretted about Mr. Bush鈥檚 prospects for getting a deal.

鈥淚f a deal hasn't been signed and sealed over the weekend, expect massive market turmoil. Monday will be a bloodbath,鈥 said Martin Slaney, head of derivatives at GFT Global Markets in a note widely borrowed by mainstream media.

The Times (of London) said the White House talks had descended into 鈥渁 verbal brawl.鈥 Its website exhorts: Watch our video! But alas, there鈥檚 no footage of Henry Paulson sinking down on one knee to persuade Democrats not to take their boxes away.

Now that would be worth paying a few bucks to see.

Joining the game of Beat the Banker today in Washington is our very own Prime Minister Gordon Brown. He鈥檒l need to tread carefully when he meets Bush. Britain鈥檚 financial system is squealing (more emergency cash was squirted at the money markets by the Bank of England this morning) and could use a swift US bailout for reassurance.

But Mr. Brown also knows this form of state intervention is controversial. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders (a left-leaning independent) summed it up in an op-ed piece for the Guardian鈥檚 鈥淐omment is Free鈥 site when he said:

鈥淭his proposal as presented is to force the middle-income families of the United States to pick up the cost of fixing the horrendous economic mess that is the product of the Bush administration's deregulatory fever and Wall Street's insatiable greed.鈥

But is this fair? Aren鈥檛 these the same families who splurged on credit during the good times?

David Maund, an insolvency expert at Alvarez & Marsal, a consulting firm, knows a thing or two about what happens when the numbers don鈥檛 add up any more. He summed up the countervailing view 鈥 that it鈥檚 not just the bankers to blame and that ordinary folks have got to take the hit, too.

鈥淥rdinary people gorged themselves on debt in recent years, over-extending themselves to fund lifestyles that weren鈥檛 sustainable,鈥 he told me.

鈥淚t鈥檚 hardly surprising that it鈥檚 all come crashing down around their ears. If people had invested [sensibly] in property or shares over the last 5 years, instead of buying a load of consumable rubbish they didn鈥檛 need, then they probably would have done very nicely, and would be hurting a lot less now.鈥

Deal or no deal?

Or may be we should ask: Can Bush assemble a coalition of the shilling?

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
QR Code to Bailout Deal or No Deal?
Read this article in
/Business/global-credit-crisis/2008/0926/bailout-deal-or-no-deal
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe