Monday, February 23, 2009

When the last thing we need, obviously, is a bunch of trillion-dollar Hail Mary passes.

From Felix Salmon:

"
Treasury's Plan, in English

Dave Wrixon has the simplest explanation yet of the latest iteration of the Treasury's bank bailout plan:

It is just a poison pill for debt that is not repaid on time. Basically, you borrow money at fixed interest rate but with a redemption period. If you fail to redeem the debt on time you get nationalized. Simple really.

Put like that, it's clear why the plan is a bad idea: it gives banks' executives every incentive to take massive risks to avoid nationalization. When the last thing we need, obviously, is a bunch of trillion-dollar Hail Mary passes."

Me:

Actually I'm feeling better about this plan now. It's very well conceived. After all, it's designed to allow the banks to do what they're good at: take massive risks and throw Hail Mary passes.

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