Saturday, January 17, 2009

So I wonder do why the nationalization option never made it into the WSJ story. If it's been rejected as an option, I'd love to know why.

Felix Salmon is like me, only I feel this evasion of responsibility is more tragic than he does:

"
Bailout Incrementalism Continues

According to the WSJ, Treasury and the Fed are considering two big ideas. The first is to create a new state-owned "bad bank" to buy up toxic assets -- TARP I, essentially, rebranded. The second is to institutionalize the deals given Citi and BofA, so that anybody can get them.

But where is nationalization? It's a better idea than either of these, because it gives the government more upside and also more control -- both over management decisions and over the degree to which the banks are actually lending.( THE GOSPEL TRUTH )

Anecdotally, even anti-big-government Republicans are coming around to this way of thinking: more half-measures simply aren't going to work( HYBRID ), and if we are going to end up nationalizing, better we do it sooner than later( TRUE ). So I wonder do why the nationalization option never made it into the WSJ story. If it's been rejected as an option, I'd love to know why."

Ideology. I base my positions on the following people:
Bagehot,Graham,Fisher,Keynes,Hayek( Of The Road To Serfdom ), Austin, Wittgenstein, Merleau-Ponty, Charles Taylor, Anthony Giddens, Nozick, Rawls, Gewirth, and mostly Edmund Burke. A Whig. Have the people who claim to be Burkeans ever really read him?

The inability to understand Political Economy and Politics is our main problem. In this crisis, the following people have been invaluable:
Buiter,Wilmott,Salmon, Justin Fox, Kedrosky, DeLong,Free Exchange, Nick Rowe,Davi,Setser,Peston, Dean Baker,Mankiw, and a few others. A lot of these experts remind me of a comment made about a famous philosopher by my famous philosophy teacher:" Polymath you say? Why he doesn't even qualify as a monomath".

The investors I like:
W.Gross,J.Grant,W.Buffet, Jim Rogers, John Paulson, Hugh Hendry, are all over the place. But they have been helpful as well.

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