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A Stress Test for the Latest Bailout Plan

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Joe Nocera talks to experts like Simon Johnson at MIT. Johnson says that when he talks to other experts, after a two minute discussion, they say we should just nationalize the banks. Here Christopher Whalen, a veteran bank analyst, of Institutional Risk Analyst, and Joshua Rosner of research firm Graham-Fisher, say the same thing, with the phrases, lets get on with it or just do it. Says Simon Johnson, thats what we told emerging market countries, Thailand in 1997, or Russia in 1998, when he worked at the IMF. He says we told them to close down some of the banks, and take over the others, and inject government capital. He adds its the best practices, and its straightforward. So asks Nocera, is Geithner talking about the stress test banks will be subjected to, as first step preceding nationalization, more of a calculated approach to gradually introduce the idea of nationalization. But he isnt sure, as Geithner also told David Brooks of the NYT, that governments were not so good at managing banks. No one knows for sure. But says Nocera thats exactly what the government did to solve the S&L crisis. And the man who was former chairman of the FDIC, and helped run the program for the Resolution Trust Corporation, says the government did a pretty good job of it, taking over banks, replacing top managers and directors, and stripping out the bad assets and selling off the now healthy banks to private buyers. So can it be done again and will it be that hard? Yes, its been done before, and its not that hard say these experts. Every month that the administration and Geithner procrastinate puts the banks in a deeper hole, and will mean more layoffs and a worse crisis, even years taken to recover. What he has'nt mentioned is that even if after some procrastination the government gets around to doing it to clean up the mess, there is one added complication this time that is different than what happened with the S&L crisis or with the Swedish cleanup, or the Japanese cleanup after 2003, this time the global economy is caught up in the crisis which makes recovery that much tougher.

The Economist magazine and other experts come out in favor of government takeover of banks in 2009 to proceed quickly with restructuring

02/03/2009

The Economist magazine coming out in favor of nationalization for highly overleveraged and badly managed banks in the U.S.

Grouped Articles

The spectre of nationalisation

Economist 02/03/2009

Inside the banks

Economist 02/03/2009

A Stress Test for the Latest Bailout Plan

New York Times 02/14/2009

The Big Dither

New York Times 03/06/2009

Obama’s Ersatz Capitalism

New York Times 04/01/2009

Geithner after the first year of the Obama administration.

01/02/2009

Interview with Al Hunt of Bloomberg. His views and reflections on the crisis and proposals.

Grouped Articles

The Great Consolidation

New York Times 05/16/2010

Charlie Rose Talks to Timothy Geithner

BusinessWeek 07/22/2010

A Stress Test for the Latest Bailout Plan

New York Times 02/14/2009

Obama, Geithner Get Low Grades From Economists

Wall Street Journal 03/11/2009

Geithner's Plan: Loopholes Galore

BusinessWeek 04/01/2009

Book Review: 'Stress Test' by Timothy F. Geithner

Wall Street Journal 05/12/2014

Nationalization of banks in the U.S. in 2009

01/16/2009

As the crisis deepens and more banks become insolvent, nationalization has become a serious option for the government.

Grouped Articles

Irreversible Damage: Why Little Action on Banking Can Do Great Harm.

New York Times 04/30/2010

The Big Dither

New York Times 03/06/2009

Obama’s Ersatz Capitalism

New York Times 04/01/2009

Rescue of Banks Hints at Nationalization

New York Times 01/16/2009

U.K. Boosts Its Bailout As Bank Losses Rise

Wall Street Journal 01/20/2009

Should Obama seize Citigroup

New York Times 01/21/2009


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