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Home | Business & Economy | Wall Street Bailout Bill 101

Wall Street Bailout Bill 101

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The best-case and worst-case scenarios for the Wall Street rescue bill recently signed into law by President Bush.

A bailout of the U.S. financial system has passed Congress and was signed into law by President Bush on Friday. Now what? "The Economist's" U.S. Economics Editor Greg Ip tells "The Takeaway" what the plan is designed to do and how it will function, and explains the best-case and worst-case scenarios.

Secretary of the Treasury Henry Paulson is going to be getting down to business -- now with access to $700 billion dollars to bail out the troubled U.S. financial market. His first step, Ip says, is to restore confidence in the market by taking troubled assets off the hands of banks. This will give banks good cash in return, which will spur investors to once again invest; lenders will resume lending and banks will no longer have trouble getting funds, and will resume lending to businesses and consumers.

The Emergency Economic Stabilization Act gives Treasury Secretary Paulson broad authority and flexibility to buy anything he needs to help stabilize the crisis. The focus is on buying mortgage-related assets, but the Act will also allow for the injection of capital into failing banks.

An Office of Financial Stability will manage the execution of the Act, and will be overseen by a Financial Stability Oversight Board. The actual management of the money will be outsourced to companies that have expertise this area.

"The Takeaway" is PRI's new national morning news program, delivering the news and analysis you need to catch up, start your day, and prepare for what’s ahead. The show is a co-production of WNYC and PRI, in editorial collaboration with the BBC, The New York Times Radio, and WGBH.

More at thetakeaway.org

Comments (1 posted):

Erich Riesenberg on 12 October, 2008 12:22:58
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Is anyone else losing faith in public radio to inform people? Listening to Morning Edition, All Things Considered, and Marketplace prattle on about the coming Super Duper Depression without passage of the Bill, and the horrid market response to its passage, is more time than I like to waste.

I now understand why we are stuck in Iraq. In part, the failure of the media.

I kept hoping for the media to explain how the Plan was supposed to work, what other options were considered, and how long the Plan had been in the making. Instead, I kept hearing Congress had to do something, anything.

I and many other financial professionals suggested that buying preferred stock would be simpler, easier to value, and fairer to all parties, but coherent discussion was not in the cards.

I have donated thousands to public radio. I wish I could have it back, so something useful could be done with it.

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