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White House bails out auto bailout

Posted Dec 15 2008, 01:06 PM by Minyanville
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Bailouts are now being bailed out.

After the Senate failed to agree on terms for the rescue of General Motors and Chrysler, Detroit asked the Bush Administration to jump in and play savior. Over the weekend, White House officials pored over the two automakers' books, trying to figure out how much cash the Treasury Department would need to cough up to keep them alive.

According to the Wall Street Journal, estimates for the total amount vary from $10 billion to as much as $40 billion, but no one can seem to agree on how best to spend the money -- any of it. GM, Chrysler and Ford have been asking for money for months, to no avail. Ford, for it's part, claims it doesn't need an emergency loan -- but still likes to remind lawmakers just how bad things would get if GM or Chrysler were to fail.

Since the $25 billion allocated earlier in the year for renewable energy investments appears too politically costly to touch, the money has to come from somewhere. While Congress, the United Auto Workers, and the Big Three's top brass slog it out on Capitol Hill over the terms of a potential bailout, bean counters are scurrying around Washington scrounging up the cash. That's a tall order, since all but a paltry $15 or so billion is left of the first tranche of the $700 billion financial system bailout.

If Treasury wants to tap TARP, it needs to ask Congress to release the rest of the money. And if there were ever a day to keep the television locked on C-SPAN, this will be it. Watching irate senators and appalled members of the House rail at Treasury Department officials and their smug Federal Reserve cohorts who've begging for more money like spoiled teenagers asking for bigger allowances would be better than even the best reality TV.

Access to the money, however, would require plans for a host of prickly topics, such foreclosure prevention and federal aid to struggling municipalities. The immediacy of the problem -- GM and Chrysler both say they won't make 2009 without a cash infusion -- eliminates the possibility of designing programs to effectively use the rest of the bailout money.

The Fed, up to this point, has been reluctant to get involved. Chairman Ben Bernanke claims car-makers are outside his realm, and that the Fed doesn't want to overstep its bounds. Such a claim borders on the absurd, since Bernanke's stated vision is to protect the economy by any means necessary. His supposed fear of politicizing the "apolitical" Fed is akin to closing the barn door a few months after the horses left.

In previous government-sponsored bailouts, such as AIG and Citigroup, taxpayers received warrants for ownership of the companies the government deemed worthy of propping up. Now that state-owned companies are bleeding into the broader economy, the Great American Socialist Experiment can finally begin in earnest.

Top Stocks blogging partner Todd Harrison is founder & CEO of Minyanville.com. This post was written by Minyanville Contributor Andrew Jeffery.

Related reading:

Obama's New Deal

Auto Bailout Still Has To Get Past Senate

Big Three Cut Out Middleman, Just Ask You For Money

Comments

 

How about they don't give any money to the 'Big 3' and instead give every taxpayer $1000 towards a new Honda, Toyota or Nissan?

American cars are crap.

"  The extent of the bailout is getting ridiculous.  While it is a nice gesture to assist ailing financial institutions, automakers and others, the problem is when it ends.  The system of giving handouts seems arbitrary and does not assist the average Joe and Jane person out there directly. There is no accountability either.  Paulson could give his grandmother a million and no one can say or do a thing about it.  It is like having an unlimited book of blank checks. "   -  http://www.USANews.TV  

so·cial·ism  

Pronunciation: \ˈsō-shə-ˌli-zəm\

Function: noun

Date: 1837

1: any of various economic and political theories advocating collective or governmental ownership and administration of the means of production and distribution of goods.

Will all the sheep in this country continue to allow this to happen? EVERYONE-stop participating in these steps allowing the government to control everything. It is time for everyone to stop paying taxes that are being distributed to big business. This whole financial mess was created by the government in order to instill fear and panic-thereby gaining more and more control over us.

Please don't give any more tax payers money to the millionaires. We still have people losing their homes every day. Besides how many tax payers making minimum wage and raising a family can buy a NEW car anyway.

I don't think they should have bailed any of them out.  The 700 billion should have sent to the banks that holds defaulting mortgages to specifically pay those mortgages.  These poor business practices got alot of regular average people in trouble, by promising them the world. They inflated apprasials, income and credit scores. It should not have been an open checkbook.  History wil repeat itself.  They should have appointed a mortgage Czar.   I don't recall the finanicial institutions having to submit a new business model, made prove how they would reform their lending practices or their CEO's being made to step down.  As much as I am against bailing out the auto industry, the trickle down economics are going to devastate all of us.

The 700 billion dollar bailout equals about $15000.00 to every homeowner in the United States, so I was told? How about  giving  the money to the people that sent it to the Government in the first place?

It saddens me to see our carmakers stooping so low as to be pleading for help from of all places, the White House! What is going on? From my lowly perch, I say, all they need is to make a good car. No need to re-invent the wheel, or to tell us what we ought to drive. The Volt is only an idea, and will always be. Show us a good, practical design we can live with. Now. Maybe put that 200 MPG carburettor to work? Instead of coming out with rehashes like the new Camaro and the failed Challenger, or f-ing us over with another tired old Focus, how about retooling to make something like a betterToyota Corollas or Honda Civic? See how many of them are on our roadways? Get the hint? I have always loved American cars. I grew up with them. It pains me to see them get beaten up so badly by cars from abroad.

Hey Roy...YOU SHOULD MOVE TO JAPAN OR CHINA SINCE YOU LIKE THEIR PRODUCTS SO MUCH YOU IDIOT!!!

I still think the oil companies ought to bail out the auto makers, or is the some form of anti-trust????

That is ridicoulous!!! The goverment complains about immigrants abusing and taking advantage of  healthcare , but what about the investors and big financial firms that failed  due to faulty loans and governement spending our hard earned tax money on the bailout? Investors and the big firms should take responsibility for their actions!!! The American Dream is just a fantasy now!!

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