Quote:
Originally Posted by KAPital PHINUst
America will experience a significant depression, bailout or not, but a bailout can make a difference between the depression for three years (without a bailout) and three decades (with a bailout). Just let it go, let the market correct itself, and everything will come out in the wash.[/COLOR]
|
This is specious reasoning at best.
Some of the bailout plans will actually pay for themselves over time, and by giving the market a firm bottom backed by the (still) highest-rated credit risk in the world, both the short-term and long-term viability can be ensured.
You're putting up a false dilemma - there are more options besides "this bailout plan" and "no bailout plan." Also, it's not "short term" or "long term" - it can be both.
Besides this, there really isn't this guarantee that the market will correct itself - while I wish there were, the current US economy is not exactly run by Adam Smith's Invisible Hand. In short, we've inbred many of the economic and production factors to the point where market forces may not, in fact, correct themselves - in which case, brief nationalization may be superior to lengthy failure and relying on other nations to resuscitate the US economy through outside investment.