To: Road Walker who wrote (424417 ) 10/10/2008 9:28:14 PM From: tejek Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1575422 Last month, when the U.S. Treasury Department allowed Lehman Brothers to fail, I wrote that Henry Paulson, the Treasury secretary, was playing financial Russian roulette. Sure enough, there was a bullet in that chamber: Lehman’s failure caused the world financial crisis, already severe, to get much, much worse. Yes, but a lot of people that knew LEH well......Cramer along with Paulson.....did not realize how extensive LEH's world wide involvements were. I think they thought it was like Bear Sterns. As much as there was a punitive component to letting LEH fail, I don't think they would have had they realized how big LEH really was. The consequences of Lehman’s fall were apparent within days, yet key policy players have largely wasted the past four weeks. Now they’ve reached a moment of truth: They’d better do something soon — in fact, they’d better announce a coordinated rescue plan this weekend — or the world economy may well experience its worst slump since the Great Depression. It seems to me they are moving as fast as they can. Remember Congress/the Republicans stalled things for one of those 4 weeks. And it took a while to get Bush on board.Let’s talk about where we are right now. The response to this downward spiral on the part of the world’s two great monetary powers — the United States, on one side, and the 15 nations that use the euro, on the other — has been woefully inadequate. Yes, it looks that way right now.....however, some of the things that have been done are just now starting to have an effect.........ie the varying spreads between the LIBOR and the fed fund's rate have just started to narrow in the last two days.....hesistantly if not consistently. And other elements put in motion won't be felt for a while. Rome didn't get destroyed in a day and it won't get rebuilt in a day.Europe, lacking a common government, has literally been unable to get its act together; each country has been making up its own policy, with little coordination, and proposals for a unified response have gone nowhere. I've heard this before......it surprises me. I thought they were further along in their integration. I know Germany as the strongest player tends not to be cooperative on joint ventures but........ The United States should have been in a much stronger position. And when Mr. Paulson announced his plan for a huge bailout, there was a temporary surge of optimism. But it soon became clear that the plan suffered from a fatal lack of intellectual clarity. Mr. Paulson proposed buying $700 billion worth of “troubled assets” — toxic mortgage-related securities — from banks, but he was never able to explain why this would resolve the crisis. The bailout makes prefectly good sense to me.What he should have proposed instead, many economists agree, was direct injection of capital into financial firms: The U.S. government would provide financial institutions with the capital they need to do business, thereby halting the downward spiral, in return for partial ownership. When Congress modified the Paulson plan, it introduced provisions that made such a capital injection possible, but not mandatory. And until two days ago, Mr. Paulson remained resolutely opposed to doing the right thing. Frankly, I am not comfortable with that approach. Besides its one thing to get involved in one or two banks but its quite another to get involved in multiple banks like would have to be done in the US. It feels too much like nationalizing the banking system in this country. I have an unscientific and instinctive objection to it for which I can't provide a rational argument.The question now is whether these moves are too little, too late. I don’t think so, but it will be very alarming if this weekend rolls by without a credible announcement of a new financial rescue plan, involving not just the United States but all the major players. We can only hope its not too late.Why do we need international cooperation? Because we have a globalized financial system in which a crisis that began with a bubble in Florida condos and California McMansions has caused monetary catastrophe in Iceland. We’re all in this together, and need a shared solution. Another reason for international cooperation.....we don't have enough money. Some are talking going hat in hand to the Saudis or the Kuwaitis to get the money. Not pretty. What should be done? The United States and Europe should just say “Yes, prime minister.” The British plan isn’t perfect, but there’s widespread agreement among economists that it offers by far the best available template for a broader rescue effort. And the time to act is now. You may think that things can’t get any worse — but they can, and if nothing is done in the next few days, they will. I can't argue with him on this issue. What do you think about his points and his general push for direct injection of gov't capital into troubled banks?