"Gaming theories
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- Economist.com | WASHINGTON
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- Financial markets
THOUGHTS continue to circulate on the game-ability of the PPIP plan proposed by the Treasury. Approaches to the problem seem to fall into three categories. The first is the know-nothing strategy taken by Jeff Sachs, which ignores everything Treasury has said about the plan and is little more than dishonest fear-mongering. A second, more interesting approach, asks whether the government might not want or expect a certain level of self-dealing to take place. The auctions, in this case, represent an effort to recapitalise banks by overpaying for assets—the government is helping banks to game it out of money, because it needs to give banks money.
This is certainly a possibility, but I am a little sceptical. For one thing, it's not a particularly direct way of recapitalising banks (although, if the government views Congress as an obstacle to doing this directly, then that's an advantage of the plan). More seriously, the political blowback seems likely to be significant. I can't imagine anyone in the Treasury or the White House is anxious to see banner headlines announcing that Citi fleeced taxpayers using government money in government funds. I really think that Tim Geithner wants to avoid gaming of the plan.
Which brings us to the third approach, which is discussed in this post at Rortybomb—that the financial blogosphere should operate like a bunch of programmers debugging a piece of open-source software, spotting the flaws before banks are allowed to exploit them. I think this is completely fair. I don't know if Mr Geithner and his associates were clever enough to hope that the blogosphere would operate in this matter, but I do hope they're paying attention to the more credible scenarios being circulated.
The distinction between the first and third approaches is intent. Mr Sachs wants to reduce confidence in the PPIP programme because he wants the government to take on the banking system more aggressively. Mike at Rortybomb, by contrast, says he wants the government to succeed in its efforts. I do too, and since the Treasury isn't likely to abandon its partnership strategy, I'd prefer Mr Sachs go back to writing about mosquito nets, and let the folks with time to read Treasury's white papers comment on the weaknesses in the Geithner plan."
Me:Don the libertarian Democrat wrote:
I basically agree with you, and am in the odd position of defending the PPIP now, even though I first commented about my support for a Swedish type solution on Sept. 23rd. But this Caballero post in the WaPo is too much:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/04/05/AR200904...
"Unfortunately, an already complex economic problem is being compounded by an awful political environment, and the prefrontal cortex of our political system is freezing up as well. Politicians and commentators from the left and right are in panic mode and have retrenched to their basic instincts, moving away from reasoned analysis. It is, frankly, scary to hear the right regurgitating the untimely liquidationist claims that Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon made during the onset of the Great Depression. It is also frightening to see the left going after Wall Street "oligarchs" and the financial institutions they have always hated, which finally are easy prey."
Here's a post of mine from Oct. 2nd:
"1) A totally free market plan.
2) A version of the Swedish Plan.
In my mind, there are three points that are informing my views on which plan to favor:
A) There will be a government intervention of some sort, undoubtedly large.
B) Because crises such as these bring about government intervention.
C) If there is government intervention, it should be for as broad a purpose as possible and be as thrifty with the taxpayers money as possible.
Based on these assumptions, I favor a version of the Swedish Plan.
It's not that I don't see other plans as possibly working, but hybrid/compromise plans are generally:
1) Easier to manipulate by special interests.
2) Harder to determine what worked and what didn't.
3) Riskier financially.
That's how I've approached this crisis. "
Here's one from Oct. 4th:
"Problems With The Bailout
From the NY Times article "For Treasury Dept., Now Comes Hard Part of Bailout", I see the following problems with the plan as envisaged:
1) Possible conflicts of interest with the administrators of the plan.
2) Overpaying for assets.
3) Doesn't do enough to ease credit markets or makes it worse.
4) When the assets are eventually sold, there is a huge and unanticipated loss.
5) Lobbying by hedge funds, etc.
Are there others? "
It's one thing to accept that we're stuck with a ghastly hybrid plan, and we need to make the best of it. It's another to call it a work of genius.
The social problems and disgust with the private market are exacerbated by this hybrid plan. It would have been better, if possible, to nationalize and then privatize. Let's not learn the wrong lessons here.

































