A modest proposal: How about a trickle-up bailout instead of trickle-down

Author: Scott Marshall 

People's Weekly World Newspaper, 09/29/08 16:27   

  
Perhaps the biggest fault of the bailout being debated (possibly passed by the 
time you read this) is that it is based on the idea that the relief given to 
Wall Street will trickle down to hard hit working class folks on Your Street. 

Who knows? Given that the underlying problem of crazy predatory mortgages and 
lending practices, and the housing bubble are not fundamentally addressed, then 
the bailout could just as well not avert a meltdown. Most people you talk to 
don’t have much confidence that the bailout will slow foreclosures, 
unemployment or declining incomes. 

But what if the bailout went the other way? What if taxpayers bail out 
themselves and then the benefit trickled up? 

How could you do it? What if everyone who has lost a home to foreclosure in the 
last year, or is in foreclosure, or is behind on their house payments, got a 
bailout directly from the Treasury? This would be a direct injection of 
liquidity into the financial markets. Banks and lending institutions would 
receive an infusion of cold hard cash from their victims, er… customers. This 
would immediately stimulate consumer spending also. It would free up stressed 
incomes for working class families and right the injustice of the unfair and 
predatory lending practices used by the big finance boys on Wall Street. If 
this works then Congress might want to extend it to car loans and other big 
loans - this would inject liquidity into the auto industry instead of the $25 
billion taxpayer bailout to auto already passed by Congress. 

I can hear the rightwing now. How can you reward those who used poor judgment 
and borrowed over their ability to pay back? Well yeah…. Isn’t that the 
“principal” that is already enshrined in the Wall Street bailout? Not to 
mention that the housing bubble that got us into this mess began with risky, 
predatory loans. But now increasingly the crisis involves conventional loans, 
overwhelmingly by folks who have faithfully paid their mortgages. Wouldn’t 
millions of people getting a several thousand dollar bailout do more to free up 
spending and money circulation than a few dozen big lenders getting billions to 
put in their bank vaults? 

This could even be extended to health care. Instead of a bailout of insurance 
vampires like AIG, or silly schemes to give tax credits for private purchase of 
insurance, why not pay the full premiums with no deductibles and no co-pays for 
every person in the US (Might be called single payer). Then, working class 
families (the overwhelming majority) again, would have more cash to circulate 
and consume - billions in liquidity. And corporations would shed billions in 
healthcare costs thus freeing up huge amounts of capital to invest in creating 
jobs and Greening their industries. Congress might then realize that the 
predatory “middlemen” of big financials, like private insurance companies, 
don’t really play any useful purpose anyway - and could be allowed to go out of 
the healthcare business. 

Not only would $700,000,000,000 probably be enough for a trickle up bailout, it 
would probably also calm world markets faster, because it would get at the root 
of the current economic crisis. And it would promote goodwill and a better 
image of America. It would show that even under gigantic state owned capitalism 
with all its vast inequalities, it is still possible to fight and win humane, 
logical, people-helping solutions. 

I can hear my conservative friends now, “This will only lead to even bigger 
public programs. People will start taking about nationalizing the big oil and 
energy companies, nationalizing the banking system, free education and child 
care, and on and on.” 

Well yeah…… 



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