(T)he Treasury's TARP program has even managed to create a potentially illegal tax loophole that grants banks a tax-break windfall of as much as $140 billion. Lawmakers are furious - but possibly powerless, afraid that a full-scale assault on the tax change could cause already-done deals to unravel, which would cause investor confidence to do the same.Well that had to come as a surprise -- commercial entities outwitting the Federal government and using the money to make a profit. I'm sure once The One takes office and we have a president with no actual experience in running anything at all and no commercial experience plus a congress made up of similar types, we'll get the results we're looking for from loading a trillion dollars into a confetti cannon and blasting it all over the place.
One could even argue that since this first bailout (the $700 billion TARP initiative) has fueled takeovers - and not lending - the government had no choice but to roll out the more-recent $800 billion stimulus plan, aimed at helping consumers and small businesses. It's a move that may spur lending and spending, but still adds more debt to the already-sagging federal government balance sheet.
Monday, December 15, 2008
Revving up for the Feeding Frenzy
In a previous post, I showed an aquarium of piranha feeding as an analogy to the way the upcoming stimulus spending spree would be received by Washington lobbyists and contractors. Now dig this.
Here, a wise, old Obama administration official oversees the expenditure of stimulus funds.
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2 comments:
Nice cannon, but to get a trillion dollars through it I think we need something more like a leaf-blower attached to an auger-feed hopper, for that continuous, hosing-it-around-the-room effect.
LOL!
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