Showing posts with label finance reform. Show all posts
Showing posts with label finance reform. Show all posts

Thursday, October 2, 2008

The "New" Bail Out Bill - More Tax Breaks

Thursday, October 2, 2008 - 9:06 AM EDT
| Modified: Thursday, October 2, 2008 - 9:31 AM
Bailout bill includes $100B in energy, other tax breaks
Baltimore Business Journal
The $700 billion bank rescue bill approved by the Senate Wednesday
night includes $100 billion in tax cuts for alternative energy and
other breaks for businesses and individuals.

The tax breaks passed by the Senate include $17 billion in energy
incentives, renews business research credits and puts off an
alternative minimum tax hike for 24 million households.

The energy tax credits are seen as crucial to the continued growth of
the alternative energy industry. Likewise, the research tax breaks is
expected to boost clean tech efforts, as well as bolster more
mainstream businesses.

The Senate bailout plan is to pay for much of the tax breaks by
cutting back on breaks to oil companies and eliminating deferral of
taxes on profits earned in offshore funds.

Also buried in the plan are numerous other tax breaks, including
doing away with a 39-cent excise tax on makers of wooden arrows
designed for children as well as tax breaks for movie producers and
stock-car racetrack owners.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Bailouts have been happening for years, this one is just getting more news

Here are a few interesting summaries, and non partisan articles on the financial issues over the last 20 plus years
TO BAILOUT OR NOT, THAT IS THE QUESTION - No answer here, but we do know that this country or any country has finite financial resources. Can we afford to support Wall Street and essentially nationalize the financial industry? Should we?
Maybe we should, but where will the money come from for our already underfunded Social Security and Medicare programs?
What about underfunded government pensions and retiree health care?
Not to mention proposals for universal health care.

ON THE OTHER HAND - Do enough Americans truly understand the seriousness of the situation we find ourselves in? Do "Main Street Americans" understand the possible impact of the current credit freeze on their lives and their livelihoods? Here's a Washington Post column, "They Just Don't Get It," that does a pretty good job of summing up the situation.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/09/29/AR2008092902762.html

SUBPRIME PRIMER - Here it is with names removed, not to protect the innocent, but in an attempt to be nonpartisan!
  • In 1971 Congress created a worthy project with noble intentions the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA). Over strong industry objections, it mandated that all banks meet the credit needs of their entire communities.
  • 1995 saw stronger regulations and performance tests that coerced banks to substantially increase loans to low-income, poverty-area borrowers or face fines or possible restrictions on expansion. These revisions allowed for secularization of CRA loans containing subprime mortgages.
  • By 1997, greedy bankers started bundling good loans with poor ones and sold them as prime packages to institutions here and abroad. That shifted risk from the loan originators, freeing banks to begin pyramiding and make more of these profitable subprime products.
  • Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac joined in the "greed fest."
  • By 2003, these "quasi-governmental agencies had $1.5 trillion in outstanding debt and a bill was proposed to "rein" things in.
  • In 2005, a bill was proposed to "bring some oversight to Fannie and Freddie." Google the words inside the quotation marks if you are curious as to who proposed such a bill and who defeated it.
  • These subprime products have now permeated the entire world economy.
  • Of course, it doesn't help that our politicians have spent like "drunken sailors," refused to move toward energy independence and terribly divided this nation by politicizing the "war on terror."
SUBPRIME PRIMER TWO - Just in case you are a visual learner, here is a slightly different and somewhat humorous primer. Caution: strong language ahead!
http://www.slideshare.net/guesta9d12e/subprime-primer-277484/

OTHER RECENT BAILOUTS - Many said this was a slippery slope and maybe it is.
See a quick summary by clicking here
(looks like they haven't had a chance to post the recently passed $25 billion for the automobile manufacturers).