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Friday, February 10, 2012



Coming to terms with the unfairnes of bailout logic

BY WILL GLOVINSKY

In print | Published February 19, 2009

Bailing out. It’s a funny term, really. It could refer to anything from leaky rowboats on a summer day to Kiefer Sutherland parachuting out of the plane right before the suitcase bomb explodes. So what are we doing here? That question is on everyone’s mind. The issue is not so much the necessity of the bailout measure, but rather its intricacies and implications. Anybody can tell you that aggregate demand needs to be dramatically increased and that the only big spender at the moment is the federal government.

And these people are right. So far the government has bailed out many banks and propped up insurance and auto companies, and these have been largely necessary actions. But what do bailouts — of companies, of economies — do to us mentally?

Besides the “shovel ready” stuff (financial crises really bring out the most evocative phraseology), one of the most immediate results of the government’s response to the economic meltdown has been for everyone to check his or her wallet and ask, “What about me?” Because the fact is that bailing out, whatever its connotations, has got us feverish.

The illogic of it all is that you have to support the “bad guys” because we depend on them even while we condemn them. This paradox throws a wrench in the system, and suddenly there are no rules.

If the guys who shifted around the sub-prime mortgage bundles and the people who purveyed overwrought SUVs get bailed out, then how about my car payments? The inherent injustice of bailouts, coupled with their supreme necessity, screws up our basic tenets of responsibility and fairness, and we’re left with unbridled self-interest because what’s good for me is good for everyone.

Of particular interest to Swarthmore students is a Facebook group called “Cancel Student Loan Debt to Stimulate the Economy,” with more than 65,000 members. Their proposal suggests that if educated debtors had their loan obligations forgiven, they would inject into the economy the money that they send each month to banks. Or, as the group’s statement puts it: “Instead of funneling billions, if not TRILLIONS of additional dollars to banks, financial institutions, insurance companies and other institutions of greed that are responsible for the current economic crisis, why not allow educated, hardworking, middle-class Americans to get something in return?”

Now, as a debtor myself, I have nothing but empathy for these grumpy yuppies. I too would like my Stafford slate to be wiped clean in the name of America’s economic well-being; I would love to take part in the conflux of patriotism and selfgain. But the basic premise of aiding a segment of society that in all probability will do very well for itself financially seems rather dubious in a time when others are losing their homes and jobs.

Or to think of it another way, should the government be forgiving loans at a time when aspiring students are having trouble simply taking out new college loans? And yet, viewed from afar, the argument put forth by the group’s members is essentially the same as the argument behind hundreds of billion of dollars already approved by Congress. An interest group is claiming that it is hurting and that its pulse is one and the same with the greater economy’s. The holistic approach that we must take when evaluating a rescue bill compels the government to spend money in sectors that do not seem to need it on face value.

And that’s the trouble with bailouts: they don’t adhere to the reason delivered to us in nursery rhymes and aphorisms. Fairness steps aside for efficacy and, although Tuesday’s bill has some very good aid directed at needy people, other aspects of the government’s response like the Troubled Asset Relief Program have had to eschew all talk of deservingness. The main considerations are how effectively the government’s borrowed dollar will carry the economy and what political accoutrements are needed to ensure the bill’s success.

Furthermore, bank bailouts defy yet another basic idea (that of “purchasing”) when the government neglects to take any directorial role in the private institutions it effectively owns. The thought of “nationalization” is so scary that we’d rather have taxpayers’ money be controlled by bankers with recently shoddy records than admit that the system has, in this case, failed.

Like it or not, that’s what bailing out our economy is going to look like. Necessity governs the day. It’s going to require a lot of coolheaded understanding and the resignation that your particular interests may not be addressed as directly as the next guy’s.

And, hopefully, when all is said and done, we will be able to return to our normal rules of fairness and propriety that we have been compelled to disregard in the name of “bailing out.”

Will is a first year. You can reach him at wglovin1@swarthmore.edu.


Discussion


Todd Friedman
Almost 3 years ago

First, I would like to say I appreciate your column, which I find very
insightful and well-written.

In any event, I respectfully disagree with you – not necessarily with
your conclusions: bailout logic is morally unattractive to the
point that it appears unfair, even illogical; however, I think your
column, as well as the aforementioned Facebook group (‘Cancel Student Loan Debt…’) are indicative of the high-minded approaches toward problem-solving that are unproductively out of sync with the rhythm of life outside of the bubble (and other college bubbles for that matter).

First, the characterization of financial institutions, and insurance companies as “institutions of greed” is an absolute disgrace, and the contempt is misplaced and hypocritical.

For example: student loans.

Banks did not write up the bill for my tuition. Swarthmore did. Banks offered the possibility to bridge the gap between my immediacy and lack of funds. Consequently, Swarthmore helped me learn. In this equation, the lending institution played a role for which I am grateful. No, I’m not about to look for a suit to high-five and yell, ‘Thanks Wells Fargo!’, although an institution that offered me – a stranger – thousands of dollars annually, simply because I showed them a report card, an acceptance letter, a good credit score and a lame criminal record does not deserve a verbal evisceration.

I used a service that provided me access. Now, I’m going to have to pay for that service. Is that really greed?

As I just demonstrated, these lending institutions are the engines and motors that give life, strength and vitality to our nation – they provide the access, bridging gaps between individuals and their education, home, business and beyond. Hence, lending institutions exist at the foundational core of our society, the support on which all else stands. Loans and bonds and stocks and shares are the substantive supports that will carry our nation/world out of the crisis and continue life as we know. College students buying books and pizza won’t have the same effect. I believe we could agree, woefully, that money runs the world largely (at least from a bird’s eye view). Such a conjecture coupled with

That being said does not deny the possibility that these
institutions are larcenous. In fact, common sense combined with
causation logic (bank deals with money, money is banks business,
bank’s goal is greed!) would suggest that these institutions are
oozing with green sludge. But that is a vitriolic personification of an industry no less cowardly than any other hate-inspired stereotype. People can be greedy, institutions are inanimate.

So what if the vast majority of bankers, brokers, and Wall Street’ers are piles of avarice? First, I challenge you or any other person who makes such a claim to objectively demonstrate that the aforementioned people are any more ambitious than people in any other industry. Business for business’ sake revolves around providing a service/good and turning a profit. No more, no less. Some people want more profit than others, some people want better grades than others.

However, at the heart of this matter lies the consumer, the brute that spawned the service and demanded the good in the first place, as well as the banker, et. al. of course.

As my mom likes to say, it takes two to tango. College students can keep dreaming about ‘fair-and-square’ policies, but what really matters is what works. Even though our job as students is to search for answers, we flaunt our hubris when we know better how to pull our selves out of a mess these lending institutions heavily contributed (notice I did not say ‘caused’ or ‘created’) to – they merely lost sight of the bigger picture; that does not mean they are inept. In hindsight, everything is 20-20 and that’s my second cliche, so I’m done.

But come on, let’s all just get real.


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