Category Archives: Obama Administration

Reactions to Geithner’s Public-Private Investment Program

Share Button

Secretary Tim Geithner announced today the long-awaited details on the financial repair plan that he promised on February 10.   Some reactions have been negative, both from the left and the right.  Paul Krugman, for example, argues that the plan does not go far enough in forcing banks to recognize the fallen value of their assets.  

But the stock market was “dazzled” by Geithner’s explanation of the PPIP proposal, with prices up strongly.    The  plan has no shortage of defenders.  Brad DeLong makes some good points, and responds to Krugman.   The Geithner Plan is an improvement over the Paulson plan in that when “toxic assets,” now called “legacy assets,” are bought from the banks, their prices are set by private bidding (from hedge funds and private equity companies), rather than by an overworked Treasury official pulling a number out of the air and risking that the taxpayer grossly overpays for the assets.   On similar grounds, Nouriel Roubini has surprised the cynics by giving (qualified) support for the plan, and points out that its design appears to follow a recent proposal by my Harvard colleage Lucien Bebchuk.   read more

Share Button

Fiscal Responsibility: Obama Puts Away the Childish Things He Found in the White House

Share Button


          Now
I am a believer.    

 

Few readers of my blog will be surprised to hear that I voted for Barack Obama in the election.   But I was always skeptical that he would be able to achieve fully his promises to bring candor, responsibility, and bipartisanship to Washington.    Experience had convinced me it wasn’t practical.   OK, I am still dubious whether it is possible to achieve bipartisanship – even for Obama.    The evidence was his failure a week ago to get a single Republican vote for his fiscal stimulus in the House (and only three votes in the Senate) despite his substantial election mandate, 63% approval rating, the severity of the current recession, and the concessions he made to the other side.     read more

Share Button

A New Depression? The Lessons of the 1930s

Share Button

          We often hear the question “isn’t this economic crisis becoming as bad as the Great Depression?” Economists can offer a variety of reassurances, but each of them is quite circumscribed:

Share Button