Sunday, October 19, 2008

"It's also that such bold steps are hardly irreversible"

From the Washington Post, a post by Greg Ip which I agree with wholeheartedly:

"The moral of all these stories is not just that far more radical action is available to the government. It's also that such bold steps are hardly irreversible. Even France's taste for ownership eventually waned. In 1986, conservatives began to sell off state-owned enterprises in part because some of them, especially the banks, needed capital. By the time the massive bank Crédit Lyonnais (nationalized in 1945) was privatized in 1999, it had cost the French government as much as $16 billion in bailouts. France has shown little taste for owning banks again. Under the bailout plan announced this past week, the French government will take stakes only in weak banks and sell them when the crisis is over. "

He mentions the following as possible:

1) Government ownership ( I agree with this )

2) Fed loans ( I agree with this )

3) Buy other assets ( I agree with this )

4) Stop trading ( I don't like this )

The idea that we will not reverse these measures I find to be highly unlikely.

No comments: