Dear Secy Geithner: It’s Not Just Some Silly Bloggers Waiting for Change
Filed under: Bailout Bill, Banking, Recession, U.S. Economy, U.S. Financial Crisis
I’ve now read in two different places that U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner blames some of his bad pub on those rascally bloggers.
Well, it’s not just the bloggers. How about Paul Krugman in a column on Monday headlined, Behind the Curve:
So here’s the picture that scares me: It’s September 2009, the unemployment rate has passed 9 percent, and despite the early round of stimulus spending it’s still headed up. Mr. Obama finally concedes that a bigger stimulus is needed.
But he can’t get his new plan through Congress because approval for his economic policies has plummeted, partly because his policies are seen to have failed, partly because job-creation policies are conflated in the public mind with deeply unpopular bank bailouts. And as a result, the recession rages on, unchecked.
O.K., that’s a warning, not a prediction. But economic policy is falling behind the curve, and there’s a real, growing danger that it will never catch up. (emphasis Clips & Comment)
Or, how about Krugman last week in The Big Dither:
Last month, in his big speech to Congress, President Obama argued for bold steps to fix America’s dysfunctional banks. “While the cost of action will be great,” he declared, “I can assure you that the cost of inaction will be far greater, for it could result in an economy that sputters along for not months or years, but perhaps a decade.”
Many analysts agree. But among people I talk to there’s a growing sense of frustration, even panic, over Mr. Obama’s failure to match his words with deeds. The reality is that when it comes to dealing with the banks, the Obama administration is dithering. Policy is stuck in a holding pattern.
Notice something? Geithner is mentioned in the Big Dither, but the bullseye for this mess with the banks and AIG is falling squarely on the president in both columns.
Here’s from an op-ed from David Smick in Tuesday’s Washington Post, Tim Geithner’s Black Hole:
Pity Barack Obama’s economic advisers. The blogs are now demanding their scalps, and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and his colleagues face a nasty dilemma: There are no solutions to the banking crisis without extraordinary political and financial risks. Thus, they have adopted a three-pronged approach, delay, delay, delay, in the hope that somebody comes up with a breakthrough. …
… The Obama team needs to remember that we got into this mess because of a lack of financial transparency. It’s time to tell the American people what the stock market already knows: that the path to recovery will probably be expensive and politically unpopular, perhaps explosively so. …
… In the end, at least one thing is certain: Our present position is unsustainable. The longer we delay fixing the banks, the faster the economy deleverages, the more credit dries up, the further the stock market falls, the higher the ultimate bank bailout price tag for the American taxpayer, and the more we risk falling into a financial black hole from which escape could take decades.
Here’s the problem with voters, taxpayers. Or, should I say here’s the problem with at least this voter and taxpayer. I voted for change. I was incensed, not so much by the $700 billion Paulson bailout, but by the rabbit hole the money seemed to disappear down. We were told at the time that there was a national emergency and the government needed to dole out this money and fast. We were told it would be used to corral some of those toxic assets and allow the banks to get back on track. Here’s a couple of stock quotes from today’s close:
- Citigroup – $1.05
- Bank of America – $3.75
The Bush Administration either lied to buy time or no one knows what the hell they’re doing. Don’t forget, Tim Geithner was one of the architects of TARP 1 as head of the New York Fed.
I want one of two things. First, justice. That means the pigs who brought this down upon us should experience the ultimate downside of that pure capitalism they love so much – failure. Or, second, someone in the federal government to take whatever time is needed and explain to the American people as simply as possible why any of these foolish companies are too big to fail and what it will take to make things right.
When Tim Geithner whines about blogs, he’s whining about Americans who are frustrated with a system that is rigged for only the wealthy and privileged among us. He’s whining about people who do their part, play their role in this economy whose lives are being changed or put on hold because of high tech, high finance gambling on Wall Street. While the Treasury Secretary ‘dithers’ and prepares to throw more of our money into the maw of AIG or CitiGroup with little transparency or meaningful explanation, he’s blowing his boss’ political capital as well as our tax dollars.
I guess you could sum this up as follows: If we’re in what’s akin to a wartime situation, lay it out for us, don’t talk down to us. And, since this isn’t war, shed the light of day on where the hundreds of billions of money from the executive branch has gone – every penny – and explain what $4 trillion in “guarantees” from the Federal Reserve means.

It’s a tactic that does work though for the population that doesn’t know much about blogging or buys into the hype that blogging only concentrates on the negative.
Primo rant. I just wonder if you are truly surprised that the financial bailout has degenerated into the morass we now witness. Where did you think the angels who possessed the knowledge, wisdom, and integrity to right the ship would come from? Can we really expect the very people who created this mess – The Federal Reserve, Congress, the Bush administration, and the banking sector itself, to suddenly see the error of their ways and sail the right course? That’s absurd. The people trying to fix this are the same ones it’s rigged for!
That said, I must commend you on an awesome post.