Wednesday, November 12, 2008

"But it's worth realizing that there are other reasons."

Worth realizing, but not acting upon. Felix Salmon argues quite persuasively that loaning money to automakers is a better investment than TARP:

"Why bail out GM? I can think of quite a few reasons:
  1. As Andrew Leonard notes, it's what Barack Obama was elected to do. "If evangelical supporters of George Bush had the right to expect conservative judge appointments and restrictions on stem cell research, then working class Midwesterners are equally justified in expecting delivery on Democratic economic promises. That's how a democracy works." If Obama didn't intend to bail out Detroit, he was being very slippery during his election campaign."
Here's my comment:

Posted: Nov 12 2008 2:31pm ET
Compared to TARP,well, I'm with you. But this:

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/a21097a0-a5d6-11dd-9d26-000077b07658.html

"Several environmental groups blasted the automakers on Wednesday, accusing them of seeking subsidies to comply with measures they have repeatedly resisted. “It simply beggars belief that the car lobbyists now come cap in hand to the European Union asking for handouts to develop the fuel efficient cars they should have built long ago,” said Jos Dings, directors of Transport & Environment, a pressure group."

And this:

https://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=25510280&postID=3619937715339986563

"Meanwhile, when no one was looking, American automakers are on the way to getting their own sweetheart deal from Congress -- billions, ostensibly to convert to more fuel-efficient cars. On a much smaller scale, this bailout is almost as outrageuos as Wall Street's. Detroit has known for years that it would eventually have to create fuel-efficient cars, but it kept producing SUVs and trucks because that was where the profits were. Japanese automakers in the US did the right thing, took the risk, made the investments in fuel-efficient technologies. But they're not getting bailed out."

It smells too much like blackmail. Couldn't we at least demand a change of management?

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