"Why Doesn't the Government Own Citigroup Outright?
The coverage of the negotiations over switching the government's preferred shares in Citigroup to common shares has been awful. It treats this issue as a purely technical question. It isn't. It is a question about handing taxpayer dollars to Citigroup's shareholders and top executives.
The government originally lent $25 billion to Citigroup at below market interest rates in the first wave of TARP lending. In December, it lent another $20 billion and guaranteed $300 billion in bad assets. (The guarantee was almost certainly worth more than $30 billion annually, given the quality of the assets.) On that day, $20 billion would have been sufficient to buy Citi in its entirety on the stock market.
So the question is, how can the taxpayers own anything less than 100 percent of Citi, if its preferred shares (the form of the loans) are converted to common shares? Why is this anything other than a huge gift to Citi's shareholders and top executives?
I was just at a White House conference listening to a lot of people talking about cutting Social Security and Medicare benefits for retirees. How can the same government that hands tens of billions of dollars to Citi's shareholders and top executives cut key benefits for the retirees? Why aren't the news reports calling attention to this massive give away to some of the nation's richest people?
--Dean Baker"
Me:This morning, William Isaacs and William Gross both said that the taxpayers are going to have to fund these giant banks or the whole system collapses. They really don't understand what they're saying. They are asking the taxpayers to pay to save the managers and owners of some of the worst run businesses in human history. They don't even say that we'll eventually have to break them up or anything of the sort. They seem to contemplate business as usual going forward. This means that the banks own us. After such an egregious deal, I doubt that many people will feel comfortable with the system we have. These men must be praying for a huge turnaround of some kind in which the taxpayers losses won't seem so bad in the future. If they're wrong, people will not accept the private ownership of businesses that depend on the taxpayers covering their losses. If they are wrong, they are guaranteeing the permanent nationalization of banking going forward.