Monday, March 23, 2009

The Geithner Plan FAQ

Q: What is the Geithner Plan?
A: The Geithner Plan is a trillion-dollar operation by which the U.S. acts as the world's largest hedge fund investor, committing its money to funds to buy up risky and distressed but probably fundamentally undervalued assets and, as patient capital, holding them either until maturity or until markets recover so that risk discounts are normal and it can sell them off--in either case at an immense profit.

Q: What if markets never recover, the assets are not fundamentally undervalued, and even when held to maturity the government doesn't make back its money?
A: Then we have worse things to worry about than government losses on TARP-program money--for we are then in a world in which the only things that have value are bottled water, sewing needles, and ammunition.

Please read the rest by Brad Delong

Update: Krugman Disagrees

1 comment:

Christie said...

I have a nagging feeling that I should be stocking up on bottled water, Spam, candles, and chocolate so we can ride out the storm when the economy collapses.