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Behind the 'We Deserve It Dividend' hoopla

Posted Sep 25 2008, 02:47 PM by Karen Datko
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The Internet is afire with a grand proposal. Instead of bailing out AIG to the tune of $85 billion, why not divide the money among all 200 million or so U.S. adults?

That gives $425,000 to every woman and man, the widely circulated e-mail says, or $297,500 after taxes. Wow.

This idea has gotten a lot of traction online, particularly as Congress is now considering a $700 billion bailout or rescue or whatever for America's financial institutions.

"Sounds like a plan," exclaimed Cathy at Cathy's Blog -- For Me For Once, one of many bloggers who've passed the $85 billion "We Deserve It Dividend" proposal on.

There's only one small problem with this plan.

"It only works out to $425 per person," an anonymous reader of Cathy's Blog wrote. "Whoever is circulating that idea is an idiot. Don't believe everything you read." And how.

But the WDID plan -- claimed by so many people as their own that it's impossible for us to know who hatched it (and forgot to double check the math) -- does suggest good uses for a huge chunk of cash if it were to fall into consumers' hands -- like paying off personal debt, spending it for college and investing it.

In fact, a Forbes.com article at MSN Money spells out other possible uses for the $700 billion contained in the latest bailout proposal:

    • The nation's bridges need $180 billion in repairs.

    • Rail infrastructure needs $185 billion in maintenance.

    • $150 billion would provide every American with private health insurance, and also pay for a universal automated health-information system.

    • The government could pay off the $500 billion cost of the war in Iraq. "Unlike investments in distressed assets, paying for the Iraq war won't produce a return, but $700 billion would stem the government's future debt obligations to its creditors," the article says.

    The author of the original WDID e-mail also tapped into people's unhappiness with bailouts like the ones for AIG (actually a federal loan), Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and the $700 billion granddaddy of all deals being negotiated as we write. One of the things people wonder is how we're all going to pay for it.

    "Yes, he did his math wrong. It actually works out to $425 per person," wrote "spectral44." "Better than the stick in the eye we're about to get, eh?"

    Comments

     

    What about the people who have paid for everything on time and have a small business that is failing because of these bad times. Where is my bail out check so I can feed my family?

    This is an utterly stupid article and even more stupid is the thought behind a "Dividend". Duh, it's called a tax cut and politians have proposed and opposed it for ages. Oh, and the bailout...think of it this way: If AIG, the largest insurer, were allowed to fail, how many insurance policies (life, health, etc) of yours would be worthless? If none of yours personally, how about your employers? What if it jeapordized your employer and thus your job? Now multply that times many many more people and you can see bailing out AIG was necessary, even if AIG was stupid to get itself in that place first. Same idea with the massive mortgage bailout. You may not directly see its impact on you, but it is there and it is real.

    forget AIG, it sounds good to me, as a hard working American that pays taxes and trying to get ahead, which didn't make me Rich but AIG crooks I say no more.  It should be given to every adult USA Citizen.

    They said providing health care for 9 million children, perhaps costing $6 billion a year, was too expensive, but there’s evidently no sum of money large enough that will sate the Wall Street pigs. If this passes, forget about any money for environmental protection, to counter global warming, for education, for national healthcare, to rebuild our decaying infrastructure, for alternative energy.

    lets just renege on the national debt and get it over with.

    The paying for the war in Iraq doesnt even make sense in this context since the 700 billion is just an increase in the national debt not a part of the federal budget, thus we basically borrow from ourselves to pay ourselves off leaveing us with an overall same amount of debt.

    forget these bozzos let them  work their  way out the same way they got themself in the mess /if I defalt on a loan to my house or not pay my taxes will the government come and help me heck no/they will be the first one in line to go after my head/we as tax payers will have to bail them while they live in Hamptons, have multi million condos in upper Manhatten and drive Ferraries all over the place while we normal Americans are workign just to make ends meet. I say let them fail bastards

    I'm a widow and even $425.00 sounds good.

    What you guys fail to realize is that this will affect all of us.  The ONLY reason why those smaller American businesses were able to even have the chance of taking off was because American capital is incredibly liquid.  The ONLY reason why most people are able to have the standard of living (which is now laughably being referred to as "hard-working American just trying to put food on the table"-evidently too well amongst nationwide childhood/adult obesity epidemics) was because of extremely liquid capital flows.  You freeze those up by saying "don't take risks", "you'll be accountable for everything" to the banks then you'll be extremely disappointed with what we get as it will wind up costing us much more in the end than $700B.  This, simply put, is a bargain.

    wasn't the oil in iraq, supposed to pay the war costs? funny how things change once a politician stems it differently. These institutions don't need a break, they need to quit letting company trips happen, and the bonus's they give the executives for doing next to nothing...One place to start for recovering some wasted money for this bailout, is stop sending NATO the 900 million dollars they send anually, its probably a much higher a figure now, that would be a great place to start for finding money for this bailout. Take the money from otherwise useless unneccessary spending, and what about the left over moneies from the presidential runs, that money could be spent for this bailout, they are plenty of normally untarnished monetary reserves to tap into, besides raising taxes...Cut Congress salaries, they make more of the people who influnces their vote then their actual pay, that 99% of them don't need to begin with, if you take out their free health care, that most common citizens don't have, eliminate their fleet car, and the free gas card they use, and combine that with the wages they don't need, and you'll find it very clear, to where the bailout can come from...its time to shrink government spending, and 1/2 the problems over.

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