Economic bailout plan requires further scrutiny by Congress
Andrew Kindiger
Issue date: 9/25/08 Section: Opinions
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Sadly, the U.S.'s economic woes have become even more complicated as abusive sub-prime lending practices and faulty mortgage backings have brought the most profitable financial institutions to their knees. Now not even the top executives are safe as major mortgage firms are receiving quite the shock from a record number of defaulted mortgages. Thus, the U.S. Treasury must find a way to sustain our nation's financial system.
Luckily for us, President Bush is able to pick from the pile of taxpayer money and allocate a proposed $700 billion bailout to companies like Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. Although Congress might not protest the fact that its action is needed in order to save the stock market and help the economy, the issue of assuring that the same problems will not continue to happen is still on the table.
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Ben Bernanke, chairman of the Federal Reserve, have been arguing for a "clean" bill to pass through Congress so that these financial issues can be dealt with as quickly as possible. However, Congress is leery to simply dive into the plan that was handed to them on Sept. 13th and let the Federal Reserve handle the situation as it sees fit.
In an article in the Sept. 23 issue of the New York Times, Sen. Christopher Dodd of Connecticut called the initial plan "stunning and unprecedented in its scope and lack of detail." A major criticism of the treasury's proposal is that the plan does not include measures for oversight. The Federal Reserve will argue that oversight would clog the process of trying to buy back and re-sell devalued mortgage securities from crumbling firms, but when you're asking the federal government and including the taxpayers to float the bill that was brought on by the dysfunction of greedy executives, there is no quick and easy solution.
A bill meant to correct a distressed economy should not be passed without guidelines to specifically address how a lump sum of bailout money should be appropriated. Furthermore, the amount of money being allocated for corporate restructuring needs to be considered and put to debate by Congress and financial wizards alike for longer then a week. A bill that will actually work is needed as quickly as possible but that does not mean Congress should pass the first thing they get from Bush.


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