When you, Joe Citizen, spend frivolously and default on your loans, the bank takes your house. When the government spends your tax dollars frivolously, it simply cooks the books to cover its excesses. When the books are left in ashes, the government just takes more of your money, or it prints more money, leaving the money it hasn't already taken from you devalued. Over the last few weeks, we've learned that you now face the prospect of an additional indignity: When your neighbor's bank spends frivolously and defaults on its loans, the government's going to take your money then too, to keep the bank in business.
Many commenters have blamed all of this on capitalism. This isn't capitalism. It's a peculiar kind of corporatist socialism, where good risks and the resulting profits remain private, but bad risks and the resulting losses are passed on to taxpayers. There's nothing free-market about it.
Thursday, September 25, 2008
Bailout Backlash: "This isn't capitalism. It's a peculiar kind of corporatist socialism"
Read the whole thing. Here is a blurb to get started:
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2 comments:
Then again: You own ManU now! (sort of).
Manchester United? Really?
Well, I guess this is an appropriate sport-y follow-up to 2006's "MM Soccer Babe" -- hahaha.
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