Thursday, October 16, 2008

Could We Have Acted Sooner?

From the Economist:

"MARK THOMA asks an interesting question, in an email he posts on his site:On the original Paulson plan, if it had been implemented last March (that's when I first proposed it, and similar proposals were floating around before that), then it effectively does recapitalize relative to today’s prices (and probably sets a floor higher than where we are now). So part of the problem is just waiting too long to put the plan in place."

Read on.

Here's my comment:

I seem to be the only person that believes that the markets were counting on a bailout of some kind if things went sour. Hence, the reaction to Lehman. However, the bailout could only come when things got really bad. I.m not saying that they were hoping for a bailout, but their neglect of certain rather obvious trouble spots does suggest that they didn't believe the whole house of cards would fall on them.
10/16/2008 1:40 PM EDT

In other words, it only went wrong when the government failed to step in, thereby causing widespread panic that the government might not clean this mess up.

No comments: