Nationalization of American Banks being discussed, page
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Topic started on 26-1-2009 @ 02:20 PM by Dbriefed
So, now they're talking bank Nationalization, and saying de facto Nationalization alone is not workable.

NY Times
Nationalization Gets a New, Serious Look

By DAVID E. SANGER
Published: January 25, 2009
WASHINGTON — Only five days into the Obama presidency, members of the new administration and Democratic leaders in Congress are already dancing around one of the most politically delicate questions about the financial bailout: Is the president prepared to nationalize a huge swath of the nation’s banking system?
...
“Well, whatever you want to call it,” said Ms. Pelosi, Democrat of California. “If we are strengthening them, then the American people should get some of the upside of that strengthening. Some people call that nationalization.
...
So far, President Obama’s top aides have steered clear of the word entirely, and they are still actively discussing other alternatives, including creating a “bad bank” that would nationalize the worst nonperforming loans by taking them off the hands of financial institutions without actually taking ownership of the banks. Others talk of de facto nationalization, in which the government owns a sizeable chunk of the banks but not a majority, with all that connotes.

That has already happened; taxpayers are now the biggest shareholders in Bank of America, with about 6 percent of the stock, and in Citigroup, with 7.8 percent. But the government’s influence is far larger than those numbers suggest, because it has guaranteed to absorb the losses of some of the two banks’ most toxic assets, a figure that could run into the hundreds of billions of dollars.

Many believe this form of hybrid ownership — part government, part private, with the responsibilities of ownership unclear — will not prove workable...."


reply posted on 26-1-2009 @ 03:50 PM by secretagent woooman
reply to post by Dbriefed


Not the greatest concept but in some respects it may be a deterrent to market manipulation and the predatory interest rates most banks charge for loans and other services. Not to mention the bizarre rise in third-party surcharges; I now have to pay Western Union a $10 monthly fee per car payment just to schedule a payment to my lender from my own bank account which a load of crap. Most credit card agencies already implemented this policy for voice-automated systems and I've noticed other fees creeping up on online payments.
One thing is for sure, putting private banks out of the credit card business will definitely drop the interest rates below the 30 percent or so a lot of us are paying now.


reply posted on 26-1-2009 @ 05:38 PM by troos1
reply to post by Dbriefed



Isn't Nationalization of the Banks a GOOD thing?
Banks being in the hands of international bankers is what is causing the problems. We need to take control of the banks so the Federal Government make the money off of the interest on loans instead of private parties; then we can erase the national debt and end income taxes.....at least that is what I got from the book "Web of Debt" and the Money Masters videos.....am I not seeing something here?...to me it sees ATSers would be FOR Nationalization?


reply posted on 26-1-2009 @ 07:15 PM by Dbriefed
Problem is, governments don't make good bankers. This experiment was tried before. Bank of the United States (1791-1811), Second Bank of the United States (1816-1836), both were shut down due to speculation, financial manipulation, and corruption. Oddly enough, it was Democrats who opposed the banks back when they were against big totalitarian government.

Edit: Adding more data...
From
Wikipedia:
In Jackson's veto message (written by George Bancroft), the bank needed to be abolished because:
  • It concentrated the nation's financial strength in a single institution.
  • It exposed the government to control by foreign interests.
  • It served mainly to make the rich richer.
  • It exercised too much control over members of Congress.
  • It favored northeastern states over southern and western states.


Actually sounds like grounds to abolish the Fed.

[edit on 26-1-2009 by Dbriefed]


reply posted on 27-1-2009 @ 01:01 AM by Dbriefed
The IMF Chief backs your position:

www.imf.org...
GLOBAL ECONOMIC CRISIS
Need to Fix Banking Sector for Stimulus to Work, IMF Chief Says
IMF Survey online

January 26, 2009
  • Economic recovery calls for revamping banking sector
  • IMF experience in banking crises shows losses must be fully recognized
  • Strauss-Kahn says financial sector continues to undermine confidence
Economic stimulus alone cannot pull the world out of the current tailspin and more needs to be done to fix the underlying causes of the crisis, particularly in the banking sector, IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said.

"If there's not a restructuring of the banking system, then all the money that you can put into [monetary and fiscal] stimulus will just go into a black hole," Strauss-Kahn told a panel discussion at Georgetown University in Washington DC.

Restructuring the banking system would involve fully recognizing losses, segregating bad assets held by banks, preferably through a public institution that can take them over, and downsizing the sector "which means that it has in some way to shrink, that some part of it has to disappear." To do this would need strong public intervention.

While a lot had been said about recapitalizing banks and recognizing losses, not enough had been done so far and the sector continued to undermine confidence, he told the panel discussion organized by the Financial Times and Georgetown University on January 26. Panelists also included Roger Altman, Chairman of Evercore Partners and a former U.S. Deputy Treasury Secretary, and William Gale, Director of Economic Studies at the Brookings Institution.

Gale reinforced the Managing Director's remarks. "We have to address the situation in the financial sector. This isn't the usual recession. This is the very deep, very long, very difficult-to-get-out-of type of recession," he said.

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