Friday, November 7, 2008

"There are also widespread concerns banks may refuse to lend out the funds granted by the Treasury’s capital injections"

Neel Kashkari boasts about TARP on the WSJ:

"Protections for the taxpayer and incentives for banks to resume lending are built carefully into the Treasury’s multi-billion dollar financial-sector bailout package, according to its chief administrator.

And though it’s only weeks into its implementation, with most of its funds yet to be dispersed — and many details of that dispersal yet to be finalized — the Troubled Asset Relief Program has already started to yield results, Neel Kashkari said."

Here's my comment:

“we had to strike the right balance to protect taxpayers .. and get banks to participate.”

In order to get them to loan. It was a credit crisis.

“Kashkari insisted the Treasury wasn’t interested in “micromanaging” the banks taking the funds, and was confident the “right economic incentives” are there for banks to use the funds wisely.

“If they take no action and they don’t put [the money] to use, their return on capital will decrease,” he said.

“We don’t think loan targets are appropriate,” he added. Indeed, “prudent mergers and acquisitions are reasonable and could be a good thing for our financial system,” Kashkari said.’

Are those the same incentives that got them into this mess?

Comment by Don the libertarian Democrat - November 7, 2008 at 4:13 pm

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