SOCIAL DISTANCE – A Randy Rainbow Song Parody
Mar 24 2020
Cartnoon
Mar 24 2020
Irrational Exuberance
In “Classical” Economics it’s sometimes called “Animal Spirits” though I prefer the simpler and more direct “Greed”.
Hope you’re enjoying your Dead Cat. The Fundamentals haven’t changed a bit (well, except to get worse from both an Epidemiological and Economic standpoint) and Unindicted Co-conspirator Bottomless Pinocchio may have queered the
incipient deal on Stimulus (which even in draft doesn’t look all that attractive).
I dunno, I’m a mere student of Clio, perhaps you would like to listen to a Nobel Laureate Economist instead.
The COVID-19 stimulus can’t be a corporate bail-out. We need a new playbook for relief
by Joseph E. Stiglitz, Salon
March 24, 2020
Three years ago, in an ugly display of pigs feeding at the trough, there was a rush of special interests to take advantage of a secretive tax bill moving quickly through the Senate, with tens of billions of dollars going to certain industries, like real estate. We saw what happened: a short burst of economic growth that turned out to be remarkably weak, given the size of the deficit that it brought about. This year, growth was expected to decline to anemic levels—lower than 2 percent. While the predicted 1 trillion dollar deficits quickly emerged, the promised increases in investment and wages did not, as corporations paid out almost a trillion dollars in share buybacks.
This is all prelude to the current debate over responding to the COVID-19 crisis. Had big business not treated itself so well, it would have had an ample cushion to weather the storm. Had it lived up to its promises of greater investment and higher wages, Americans would have placed greater trust in it; likewise, if it hadn’t resisted giving workers a measly 10 days of sick leave even limited to the crisis itself. Our democracy and economy is at great risk if we respond to COVID-19 by giving money to the loudest and most powerful corporate voices rather than thinking through where funds are most needed. Our fiscal position is at risk if we don’t work out the best way to provide the money. America is a rich country able to run large deficits, but that doesn’t mean that resources are unlimited. Inevitably more money in corporate largesse means less money for those who need it, and more inequality. The well-being of Americans today is at risk if we don’t think carefully about how best to deliver money to those who need it now.
Businesses— like many American airlines— that squandered the opportunity to build up cash reserves should be held accountable. But the costs should be borne by their shareholders, who have already been amply rewarded. Bankruptcy is not the end of the world. Chapter 11 maintains the company but forces the shareholders to pay the price for their mismanagement.
Capital markets won’t be functioning as they normally do, so there is a role for government— to provide funds, convertible bonds and/or loans with warrants, so the government doesn’t just bear the downside risk of the loans not being repaid but participates in some of the upside. There should be no gifts to corporations. And like IMF and World Bank loans, any government bailouts should come with “conditionalities,” such as no buybacks, limited dividends and CEO pay, a promise to keep workers on the job, and better treatment of stakeholders other than shareholders and management—including workers and the environment.
But states are limited by their constitutions from deficit financing. The issue here is not just access to loans, but the very ability to borrow. It is only the federal government that can borrow. The states and localities will need money urgently as their revenues plummet. Without this money, they will be forced to cut back essential programs in education, health, and welfare. There needs to be a massive temporary revenue-sharing program.
The non-profit sector—schools, universities, research institutions, welfare agencies, etc.—are another important part of our economy, no less important because they aren’t organized for the kind of lobbying that big business does. Their endowments have shrunk by a third and contributions will almost surely be down as donors’ incomes dwindle. Universities will be especially hard hit as foreign enrollment steeply declines.
This sector is central to caring for the vulnerable. And where would we be without their insight and research into understanding the virus that is causing such havoc! We can’t jeopardize our future simply because these institutions and organizations make fewer campaign contributions than big corporations.
Fortunately, everybody seems to agree that small businesses and the most vulnerable citizens need extensive help. The loan program for small businesses seems a reasonable way to get money to them quickly— if the Trump administration has the capacity to deliver. But the question of administrative capacity is even more central to delivering money quickly to the tens of millions of Americans who live on the edge.
For decades, there has been an attempt to defenestrate government, to weaken its capacities, and never more so than in the past three years. Do we have any confidence that the government could deliver checks in two weeks, as Trump has said it should? Argentina announced a program for helping every child on Tuesday of last week, and by Friday, every family had the money. I doubt that we could do that. A suspension of evictions, foreclosure, and interest on all debts is a necessary interim measure. Otherwise, with so many credit cards charging usurious interest rates of 20% or more, debts will accumulate rapidly, creating a hole from which the poor may never be able to dig their way out, made all the worse by the 2005 bank-friendly bankruptcy act that makes it so hard for workers to discharge their debts in personal bankruptcy. Other countries, like Denmark, with far more administrative capacity than we, have chosen another route: asking employers to continue paying (a large part) of wages and salaries for employees not to show up at work, to be reimbursed by the government. In effect, the companies are temporarily managing the unemployment insurance program, recognizing scaling up existing programs in the manner required is not feasible— let alone creating an entirely new program.
This economic crisis is different from any other. We can’t use the same playbook. Today, it’s not about stimulus— the problem is not lack of aggregate demand. New problems require new solutions and new priorities. Still, we should learn some lessons from the past: corporate give-aways almost never work.
Mar 24 2020
Well, this was inevitable.
I’ve worked events like this and it costs an enormous amount of money to postpone them.
At the same time who would want to go or participate? I’ll admit getting to hit on Gymnasts is an attraction.
Japanese prime minister says IOC has agreed to postpone Tokyo Olympics
By Adam Kilgore, Rick Maese, and Simon Denyer, Washington Post
March 24, 2020
Facing heavy global pressure and rising athlete dissent, the International Olympic Committee sharply reversed course Tuesday and agreed with Japanese officials that the Olympics and Paralympics will not take place this summer in Tokyo in the wake of the growing novel coronavirus pandemic. Organizers say they now hope to stage the Games by the summer of 2021.
…
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Tuesday proposed a one-year postponement to IOC leadership, including President Thomas Bach. The IOC quickly agreed the Games would be held about one year after the previously scheduled start date, July 24.“I have made a proposal of about a year,” Abe said. “President Bach said he agreed 100 percent and we agreed to hold the Olympics by summer 2021.”
Abe said he and Bach had agreed “to cooperate in order to hold the Olympics in the complete form, as a testament to victory over the infection.”
In a joint statement, the IOC and Japan’s Olympic organizing committee said they made the decision “to safeguard the health of the athletes, everybody involved in the Olympic Games and the international community.” Athletes across the world had been calling for the Olympics to be postponed, saying the lack of a decision forced them to continue training at risk to their physical and mental well-being.
…
“In light of the current conditions and for all the athletes, we made a proposal of a postponement of about a year, to hold them securely and safely,” Abe said Tuesday.Postponing the Games carries massive political, financial and competitive implications. Abe, who had staked extensive political fortune to the success of the Games, said he expects Japan will pull them off.
“As the host country, Japan would like to serve our responsibility thoroughly,” Abe said.
Sunday, IOC President Thomas Bach said it “would still be premature” to decide the fate the Tokyo Games, and as other major sports events and leagues have suspended operations and canceled play, Olympic officials had resisted the call to alter its schedule. They spent the past several weeks weighing options, as athletes and sports federations began voicing their concerns. The chorus only grew after Bach sent a letter to Olympic athletes Sunday, acknowledging for the first time that postponement was a possibility but refusing to make a decision for the next four weeks.
The Canadian Olympic Committee said Sunday it would not send its athletes to compete in Tokyo this summer, delivering a devastating blow to the IOC’s hopes to stick to its schedule. Australia’s national committee also urged its athletes to begin preparing for an Olympics in 2021, and Sebastian Coe, the influential head of World Athletics, the international governing body for track and field, called on the IOC to delay the Summer Games by a year. The national Olympic committees of Brazil and Slovenia had called for a one-year postponement, and Norway had balked at sending its athletes to Japan with the current state of the pandemic.
…
The IOC’s stunning decision is without precedent. While an Olympics has never been postponed, several have taken place later on the calendar, including the 2000 Sydney and 1988 Seoul Games, which both took place in late September, and the 1964 Tokyo and the 1968 Mexico City Games, which took place in October. The modern Olympics, which date to 1896, have been canceled three times (1916, 1940 and 1944) because of world wars.
The bulk of the rest of the piece is a discussion of how much money is involved with a bit of insight into the decision making process.
Mar 24 2020
The Breakfast Club (Simple Logic)
Welcome to The Breakfast Club! We’re a disorganized group of rebel lefties who hang out and chat if and when we’re not too hungover we’ve been bailed out we’re not too exhausted from last night’s (CENSORED) the caffeine kicks in. Join us every weekday morning at 9am (ET) and weekend morning at 10:00am (ET) (or whenever we get around to it) to talk about current news and our boring lives and to make fun of LaEscapee! If we are ever running late, it’s PhilJD’s fault.
This Day in History
NATO launches airstrikes over Yugoslavia; Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska; Elvis Presley inducted into US Army; Cat on a Hot Tin Roof opens on Broadway.
Breakfast Tunes
Something to Think about over Coffee Prozac
Simple logic dictates that if you cannot even conceive the possibility of leaving a negotiation, then it is preferable never to enter one.
Mar 23 2020
Krugman: Say NO To Corporate Slush Fund
New York Times Nobel winning economist Paul Krugman has a lengthily tweet thread slamming the corporate “slush fund” that Republicans are pushing in the two trillion dollar bail out bill.
First, beware analogies with 2008. There are some parallels, but this time the epicenter of crisis is NOT in the financial sector — and the McConnell stimulus bill is not the equivalent of TARP, which Congress eventually passed in the face of plunging markets 2/
— Paul Krugman (@paulkrugman) March 23, 2020
True, we're facing huge job losses: I wouldn't be surprised to see 10 million jobs lost over the next few weeks. But these losses are the result of social distancing, which is shutting down restaurants, entertainment, and other non-essentials 3/
— Paul Krugman (@paulkrugman) March 23, 2020
Stimulus can't and shouldn't bring these jobs back; that has to wait until the pandemic subsides. So what can we do for these workers? Aid: any kind of benefits we can manage, including incentives for firms to continue paying at least part of wages 4/
— Paul Krugman (@paulkrugman) March 23, 2020
That is, the clear and present need is for disaster relief, rather than stimulus. And notice how the debate over this relief is being framed: calls to help Americans in need are portrayed as "Democratic demands" rather than the decent thing to do. 5/
— Paul Krugman (@paulkrugman) March 23, 2020
What role, then, for stimulus? Well, there will be a second round of job losses as laid-off workers and shuttered businesses cut their purchases. This second round should be diminished as much as possible — but a few days' delay in getting stimulus right is OK 6/
— Paul Krugman (@paulkrugman) March 23, 2020
Again, not like 2008 when the financial system seemed on the verge of imploding. There are some major financial stresses, but the Fed is on the case. Oh, and aid to those in need bc of social distancing is itself a major source of demand stimulus 7/
— Paul Krugman (@paulkrugman) March 23, 2020
But McConnell wants everyone to imagine that it's like the immediate aftermath of Lehman, and that everything will collapse unless we give Trump a $500 billion corporate slush fund with no effective oversight. That's totally unacceptable 8/
— Paul Krugman (@paulkrugman) March 23, 2020
Even aside from trust issues, we have this thing called bankruptcy law that often allows corporations to remain viable entities even when they can't pay their debts. There may be cases where that won't be enough — but then you want conditions attached to aid, a la auto bailout 9/
— Paul Krugman (@paulkrugman) March 23, 2020
And then there is the question of trust. Nobody in their right mind believes that we can trust Trump to use a slush fund in a non-corrupt way, as opposed to rewarding friends — including himself — and punishing enemies. 10/
— Paul Krugman (@paulkrugman) March 23, 2020
I mean, he won't even use the power he has to order companies to produce urgently needed medical supplies. Not a chance that he would require good behavior from bailed-out businesses 11/
— Paul Krugman (@paulkrugman) March 23, 2020
And McConnell himself has shown that he can't be trusted when it comes to corporate giveaways. Remember how that huge 2017 corporate tax cut was supposed to lead to an investment boom, and instead was spent on stock buybacks? 12/
— Paul Krugman (@paulkrugman) March 23, 2020
Oh, and I hear that Rs are arguing that placing conditions on corporate aid might be too "onerous", so that companies won't take it. (a) I don't believe it (b) if they can refuse the aid rather than make sure it helps workers, maybe they didn't need it? 13/
— Paul Krugman (@paulkrugman) March 23, 2020
So, once more: this isn't 2008, when you arguably had to rush money to financial institutions to avoid immediate collapse. Stimulus is needed, but there's time to do it right. Just say no to slush funds 14/
— Paul Krugman (@paulkrugman) March 23, 2020
Mar 23 2020
Pondering the Pundits
Pondering the Pundits” is an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from around the news media and the internet blogs. The intent is to provide a forum for your reactions and opinions, not just to the opinions presented, but to what ever you find important.
Thanks to ek hornbeck, click on the link and you can access all the past “Pondering the Pundits”.
Follow us on Twitter @StarsHollowGzt
Catherine Rampell: Wanna spend $2 trillion? Here’s the agonizing choice you face.
Money needs to get spent fast. Money needs to get spent well.
To some extent, those objectives are in tension.
Balancing those goals is the immediate challenge facing Congress, as the parties haggle over how a $2 trillion stimulus package should be disbursed and accounted for. Republicans want as few strings attached to stimulus funds as possible; Democrats want a tangle of yarn tied to the legislation. Perhaps there’s a way to split the difference.
Right now, stimulus design faces a fundamental trade-off between flexibility and accountability. [..]
Separate from provisions extended help to households and small businesses, the GOP Senate bill that failed a procedural vote Sunday evening had provisions aimed at big businesses. It would offer $75 billion earmarked for airlines, cargo air carriers and undefined “businesses critical to maintaining national security,” with few preconditions. It would also give Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin enormous discretion to decide what other unspecified companies, states and municipalities can get another $425 billion in loans and loan guarantees.
And it said Treasury could delay disclosing for six months who gets these funds.
There are two main reasons to worry about this astounding amount of discretion and secrecy. One has to do with whether we can trust firms (specifically, to do right by their workers). The other has to do with whether we can trust the administration (specifically, to do right by taxpayers).
Robert Kuttner: This Stimulus Bill Will Not Save the Economy From Collapse
Let’s not repeat the slow and timid response to the financial crash of 1929.
When the stock market crashed in 1929, the Dow plummeted from its September peak of 381.17 to a low of 41.22 in July 1932. Because so few Americans owned stocks, it took three years for the financial collapse to cycle though the rest of the economy. Unemployment only gradually increased, to a peak of about 25 percent in early 1933. Gross domestic product fell steadily, ultimately declining by about 30 percent.
The economic crash caused by the coronavirus, if anything, will be sharper and steeper. If we set out to deliberately destroy an economy, requesting most people to stay home is a very effective way. The virus itself is disrupting production, but the necessary public health response to the virus is economically catastrophic — and if government doesn’t act massively to offset the damage, the collapse will worsen.
As airlines, hotels, restaurants, theaters, auto production lines and much of retail shut down while people self-quarantine, there will be enormous layoffs. Households reduce their purchases to bare necessities, causing more shutdowns and more job losses. A ravaged stock market adds to the downdraft.
The financial crash of 1929 turned into a decade-long depression because government was too slow and too timid to counteract the broader impact. Will we repeat that epic mistake?
David Leomhardt: How Trump Is Worsening the Virus Now
Medical shortages are his responsibility.
At a private New York meeting in October of 1940, William Knudsen made a desperate plea to the automobile industry’s top executives. Knudsen himself had been the president of General Motors until a few months earlier. But he had stepped down to help oversee military production at President Franklin Roosevelt’s request. The position paid $1 a year.
Knudsen told the executives that American military officials surveying the Nazis’ bombing of England had concluded that the country with the strongest airpower was going to win the war. And the United States was badly behind. So Roosevelt and his military advisers wanted the car companies to forget about making cars, Knudsen said. They needed to begin making warplanes. [..]
The coronavirus is not an actual war, but it does threaten modern society and human life in ways that nothing has in decades. More than two million Americans could die. Many will do so alone, separated from their family and friends. Funerals will often be impossible. Stores, schools and entire neighborhoods are shutting down. In the second quarter of this year, which starts next week, forecasters predict that the economy could shrink at the most rapid rate since the Great Depression.
This is a moment that calls for the urgency that Roosevelt and Knudsen summoned in the fall of 1940 — when, it’s worth remembering, the attack on Pearl Harbor was still more than a year away.
President Trump, however, has chosen a different response.
Jennifer Senior: Call Trump’s News Conferences What They Are: Propaganda
Then contrast them with the leadership shown by Andrew Cuomo, Justin Trudeau and Angela Merkel.
In a time of global emergency, we need calm, directness and, above all, hard facts. Only the opposite is on offer from the Trump White House. It is therefore time to call the president’s news conferences for what they are: propaganda.
We may as well be watching newsreels approved by the Soviet Politburo. We’re witnessing the falsification of history in real time. When Donald Trump, under the guise of social distancing, told the White House press corps on Thursday that he ought to get rid of 75 to 80 percent of them — reserving the privilege only for those he liked — it may have been chilling, but it wasn’t surprising. He wants to thin out their ranks until there’s only Pravda in the room. [..]
If the public wants factual news briefings, they need to tune in to those who are giving them: Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada and Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, whose addresses appear with English subtitles on Deutsche Welle. They should start following the many civic-minded epidemiologists and virologists and contagion experts on Twitter, like Harvard’s Marc Lipsitch and Yale’s Nicholas Christakis, whose threads have been invaluable primers in a time of awful confusion.
Jamelle Bouie: Don’t Let Trump Off the Hook
It may be time to pull together, but Republicans are still doing plenty to pull us apart.
Donald Trump and the Republican Party are trying to distract you from their catastrophic failure. [..]
In other words, now absolutely is the time for recriminations, because it’s the only way we might avoid another such administration in a country where control of government moves like a pendulum.
The public needs to know that the Republican Party is culpable for the present crisis, just as it was culpable for the Great Recession, even if it did not originate either. It needs to know that in the face of a deadly pandemic, some Republican lawmakers appear to have looked to profit rather than to prepare. It needs to understand that the deadly incompetence of Republican governance is a feature, not a bug.
This won’t happen of its own accord. It is the political task of the Democratic Party to make the public understand the nature of the Republican Party and its leading role in this disaster so that when November comes, Americans hold no illusions about what it would mean for their futures — and their lives — to give Republicans another four years of power in Washington.
Mar 23 2020
Opportunity Lost
You know, sometimes I get the impression that people don’t appreciate the punniness of my titles, not that this one is particularly deep.
It is of course a play on “Opportunity Cost” which is the price you pay for wrong or in action, as opposed to Milton’s Paradise Lost.
Cody Johnston
Mar 23 2020
The Breakfast Club (One Promise)
Welcome to The Breakfast Club! We’re a disorganized group of rebel lefties who hang out and chat if and when we’re not too hungover we’ve been bailed out we’re not too exhausted from last night’s (CENSORED) the caffeine kicks in. Join us every weekday morning at 9am (ET) and weekend morning at 10:00am (ET) (or whenever we get around to it) to talk about current news and our boring lives and to make fun of LaEscapee! If we are ever running late, it’s PhilJD’s fault.
This Day in History
Patrick Henry declares, ‘Give me liberty, or give me death,’ German parliament grants Adolf Hitler dictatorial powers, President Reagan proposes anti-nuke ‘Star Wars’ program, Movie ‘Titanic’ wins 11 Oscars.
Breakfast Tunes
Something to Think about over Coffee Prozac
There is just one thing I can promise you about the outer-space program – your tax-dollar will go further.
Mar 23 2020
Dow Be Down, Do Be Do Dow Down
Dow Be Limit Down, Do Be Do Dow Down.
C’mon, that’s punny.
Just to repeat the mechanics, Futures are limited to a 5% loss. If there are no bids above -5% Trading halts until there is one. In the Market there are Breakers at 7%, 13%, and 20%. 15 Minute Halts at -7% and -13%, Trading Closes for the Day at 20%.
The Limit Down Futures imply an Opening of -600 Points or so which would send the Dow below 19,000 (Friday Close 19,173.98) to the 18,000 level. I’ve said before that there is no technical bottom and if we were at historic Price/Earnings Ratios I think it should be 10,000.
Dow futures drop 500 points, briefly hit ‘limit down’ as investors await a stimulus deal
by Fred Imbert, CNBC
Sun, Mar 22 2020
U.S. stock futures dropped again as Wall Street waits on Washington to agree to an economic stimulus and rescue plan to cushion blow from the coronavirus outbreak.
As of 6:28 a.m. ET, Dow Jones Industrial Average futures dropped more than 500 points. S&P 500 futures were off by nearly 3%. Nasdaq 100 futures declined by 2.6%. The SPDR S&P 500 ETF was off by 3% in premarket trading.
Futures were well off their worst levels of the overnight session. Earlier, futures hit their “limit down” levels, falling 5%. Downside limits to futures contracts are implemented to ensure orderly market behavior once trading hits a certain threshold. No trades below that level are allowed.
A fiscal stimulus bill failed a key procedural Senate vote Sunday as Democrats warned the measure did not do enough to help workers and too much to bail out companies. Earlier, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi had signaled she was not on board with the Republican-version of the stimulus plan, saying: “From my standpoint, we’re apart.”
…
In the U.S., more than 30,000 cases have now been confirmed. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Sunday cases in the state soared to 15,168 over the weekend. That’s more than in France or South Korea.The outbreak has led the New York Stock Exchange to close its trading floor and temporarily move to all-electronic trading beginning Monday. NYSE expects trading to proceed as normal.
Trump announced Sunday he activated the National Guard in California, New York and Washington state — the three states with the highest reported coroavirus deaths — to curtail the virus’ outbreak.
“Things will get worse before they get better and the markets will continue to reflect that reality,” said Marc Chaikin, CEO of Chaikin Analytics, in a note. “This means that a bottoming process will take more time and probably inflict more damage to equities.”
Stocks suffered their biggest one-week decline since the financial crisis in 2008, with the S&P 500 dropping more than 13%. Those losses put the broad market average more than 32% below its record set on Feb. 19.
Last week ended with all 11 S&P 500 sectors closing more than 20% below their respective 52-week highs. The S&P 500 was also on pace for its worst monthly performance since 1940.
…
Investors have also been rattled by a sharp decline in crude prices. West Texas Intermediate futures fell 29.3% last week, their biggest weekly fall since January 1991. U.S. crude is also more than 66% below its most-recent 52-week high.
One argument you’re going to hear today is that we have to do Something, ANYTHING RIGHT NOW!
As our experience during the 2008 Financial Crash should have taught us it’s important to get these things right.
The McConnell Republican Senate Bill is not that. In addition to other horrifying features it creates a $500 Billion Slush Fund for Mnuchin to spend on anything he wants with no accountability whatsoever. In case you’re confused about the magnitude of that, it’s about 10 Bloombergs or 5 Bezos (post divorce).
Treasury’s power over $500 billion loan program becomes key sticking point in coronavirus aid bill
By Jeff Stein, Washington Post
March 22, 2020
Congressional lawmakers are feuding over a central component of the massive economic relief package being debated by the Senate, a battle that may threaten the enormous emergency aid package while reprising one of the most bitter political fights of the last decade.
The Trump administration and Senate Republicans have called for giving the Treasury Department the authority to disburse hundreds of billions of dollars in emergency federal loans to firms hurt by the economic impact of the coronavirus.
Their initial proposals called for the fund to be worth $208 billion. But after a flurry of lobbying over the weekend, Senate Republicans’ legislation now calls for a $500 billion program that would award loans to states and cities as well as businesses, according to a copy of the most recent GOP proposal.
The provision has become one of the principal logjams in urgent congressional negotiations over emergency help for an American economy facing its worst calamity since the Great Recession, in part because the Treasury Department would have broad discretion over where the money would go. President Trump already has said he wants the money to be used to rescue the cruise ship and hotel industries, making his preferences clear, but at a press conference on Sunday refused to say whether his own hotel properties would apply for the funding.
No conflicts of interest or emoluments there.
“There’s too much money with no oversight,” Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.) told reporters Sunday.
Congressional Democrats have demanded the legislation include guardrails to prevent firms that receive the emergency aid from firing their workers or stripping them of their health care, among other asks by labor groups. They also are balking at giving Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin so much authority to determine which firms receive the assistance.
Section 4003 of the legislation accounts for $500 billion for “emergency relief and taxpayer protections.” Of that money, $50 billion would go to passenger airlines, $8 billion to cargo airlines, $17 billion for companies deemed important to national security, and $425 billion for businesses, cities and states. The bill doesn’t give much more information than that in terms of who would qualify for loans and loan guarantees, leaving much of it up to Mnuchin.
Congressional aides in both parties say they will not budge on the issue, although top party leaders huddled in emergency meetings Sunday to resolve this impasse and others, and talks remained fluid. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said the Senate would move to vote Monday on the legislation, calling it “pretty solidly bipartisan” despite Democratic anger over the bailout provisions and others.
I dunno Mitch, if you can’t get Tester who can you get? Manchin?
The heated fight over the emergency aid for large businesses revives the long-standing debate over the Wall Street bailouts during the 2008 financial crisis that reshaped American politics. Republicans are forging ahead with a plan they say is necessary to save large parts of the economy from collapse but has garnered fierce criticisms, including from within their own ranks.
When Congress created the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program in 2008, they installed several levels of scrutiny to ensure the money wasn’t abused or misappropriated. For example, it created a group of regulators as well as a group of congressionally appointed experts to examine the funds. Lawmakers also created a special inspector general to investigate wrongdoing, and numerous instances of abuse eventually were uncovered.
“The arguments over attaching strings to government aid to business now reflect the persistent public backlash over the rescues and bailouts of the global financial crisis,” said David Wessel, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. “The underlying problem here is the lack of trust, both by the public and among some members of Congress in each other and in the administration.”
The Republican proposal would create limitations on the loans. It would prohibit companies receiving aid from issuing new stock buybacks as long as the loans remain in effect, a provision supported by both Democrats and President Trump. It would limit salary increases for employees who earn more than $425,000 annually for two years. The plan also says firms receiving the federal aid should maintain “existing employment levels as of March 13, 2020 to the extent practicable” before the loans have been paid back.
“Extent Practicable”? That sure didn’t work out for Bobbie Lee (the most overrated General ever) when he told Ewell that on Day 2 at Gettysburg.
Oh, and they lost. Get over it you Racists.
“We are not bailing out the airlines or other industries — period,” Sen. Richard C. Shelby (R-Ala.), chair of the appropriations committee, said in a statement last week. “We are allowing the Treasury Secretary to make or guarantee collateralized loans to industries whose operations the coronavirus outbreak has jeopardized. … This approach strikes an appropriate balance between providing assistance and protecting taxpayers.”
The Senate is advancing a separate, $350 billion measure for smaller firms hit hard by the coronavirus, while Republicans also have agreed to some Democratic demands to shore up safety net programs such as unemployment insurance.
Democratic lawmakers and labor groups say the GOP plan amounts to a “corporate bailout” that could reward business recklessness and hurt workers. Democratic leadership has demanded funding for corporations include protections related to workers, such as ensuring their job security and health care, pensions, and 401(k) contributions, as well as prohibitions on discharging their collective bargaining agreements.
Democratic lawmakers have pushed for forgiveness of the loans if more than 90 percent of company employees are retained. They want provisions mandating employee retention to have legal teeth, complaining the Senate GOP bill has too much wiggle room for companies to cut workers loose. The Treasury Department would have to publish the application criteria for firms within 10 days of passage of the law.
Critics also have expressed alarm over the transparency provisions in the GOP legislation.
Because there is none.
“There is great unhappiness with how they’re trying to advance a proposal that would be great for giant corporations but leave everyone else behind,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) told reporters Sunday. “We’re not here to create a slush fund for Donald Trump and his family, or a slush fund for the Treasury Department to be able to hand out to their friends.”
The bill also would require disclosure of the loan recipients within only six months of enactment. Trump administration officials have said they are interested in providing federal assistance to help the cruise, hospitality and oil and gas industries, among others severely hurt by the downturn since the beginning of the outbreak.
Here, let me fix that for you. Where you say “within only”? You mean only after.
Other experts downplayed the risk for malfeasance in a potential Treasury program. The Treasury Department has an inspector general who could probe the administration’s handling of the loans, and companies have a legitimate interest in keeping from their competitors immediate information on whether they have received the aid, said Tony Fratto, a former Treasury and White House official during the George W. Bush administration. Fratto also said there’s an important distinction between the Wall Street banks receiving bailout money after having a role in creating the economic crisis and businesses shuttered by the coronavirus through no fault of their own.
“All of this is going to be public; there is nothing to hide here, and no public interest served in reporting it immediately,” Fratto said. “We are not talking about companies that did something wrong. We are dealing with companies with orders to shut down their business.”
So, if there’s a public order for a company to suspend business, by definition known to everybody, exactly what “legitimate interest in keeping from their competitors immediate information on whether they have received the aid” does it serve?
They already know your doors are shut.
A final note on sheer idiocy. I hear some people are looking to close the Markets, there are many reasons this is a bad idea but one of the main ones is it doesn’t work.
Ever.
All you do is create pent up demand (in this case to Sell) that has to be resolved when you reopen.
If you think that is going to be pretty I think you are sadly mistaken.
Mar 22 2020
Rant of the Week: Nurse In Tennessee – Stupid People
After getting off from her shift at a Tennessee hospital, this tired nurse went to the grocery store, much to her dismay and our Rant of the Week.
This lady is a nurse in Tennessee.
She just left the grocery – it’s chaos – and she’s tired.
“Y’all, there are so many stupid people in this world…”??? pic.twitter.com/BCMSMm31vr
— Rex Chapman?? (@RexChapman) March 16, 2020
Thank you, ma’am, whoever you are, I know just how you feel.
Mar 22 2020
What Do You Mean No Sports?
Richard is taking the dearth of new material rather hard and e-Sports are no substitute though he’s trying to learn to like them.
Me? I like weird stuff anyway. This is the Finals of the World Professional Darts Championship. I watched it first run on BBC. It’s different.
I happen to play and while I can throw Tons and 180s I don’t because I also hustle by sandbagging my League. I’m rated a 2 which is not particularly good but because it’s based on odd accomplishments like that (my rating actually means I can be counted on to throw about 2 Tons or 80Tons per Match, so not very good at all really) I can keep it artificially low by throwing 98s (T18, T13, 5). The game I like to play is Cricket because I generally hit what I aim at. I keep my targets in the Top Half during League play so that when I’m unmonitored I can go for it.
It’s technically possible to close out a 501 Game in 9 Darts.