February 19, 2010Jon Brooks
From the World Bank blog, a post about the Zero Rupee bank note, printed in India and distributed by an anti-corruption organization called 5th Pillar.
Imagine that you are an old lady from a poor household in a town in the outskirts of Chennai city, India. All you have wanted desperately for the last year and [...]
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February 1, 2010Jon Brooks
…even if TARP saved our financial system from driving off
a cliff back in 2008, absent meaningful reform, we are still driving on the same
winding mountain road, but this time in a faster car.
Neil Barofsky, the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (that’s SIGTARP to you) has released his Quarterly Report to Congress, which you can read here in .pdf. The opening section of the Executive Summary is below. My own executive summary:
- The financial system is far more stable in parts than at the height of the crisis in fall, 2008. Banks can raise funds and many formerly on the verge of collapse have repaid the emergency government loans early. These repayments have resulted in a profit for the U.S. Treasury on some of the TARP investments, decreasing the cost of the bailout to taxpayers.
- The TARP goal of increasing financing to U.S. businesses and consumers has not been met, as lending continues to decrease and home foreclosures remain at record levels. The repayment of government funds by banks and the exit of the U.S. as a major shareholder in the banks have signficantly decreased the government’s ability to influence the policies of these financial institutions.
- Fundamental problems in the financial system have not been addressed to date, and “too big to fail” institutions are even larger, thanks in part to TARP and other bailout programs. Incentives to take reckless risk are even greater, as the market is convinced government will step in to cover losses that could threaten the system. Executive compensation also remains an incentive to take inordinate risks.
- The government’s efforts to support home prices risk re-inflating a housing bubble.
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January 4, 2010Jon Brooks
Take a look at this chart of the S&P 500, and note the big dip starting in 2000 and repeating in 2008. If you happen to be an investor who went on that roller coaster ride both times, you can probably be forgiven for being too dizzy at this point to delve into the obfuscatory world of 10-Qs, 10-Ks, and other byzantine company filings mandated by the SEC in the interest of transparency.
Unfortunately, however, maybe that’s the only way these days to get the real scoop on a company’s financial health. Investor outsourcing of crucial due diligence to the media, stock analysts, and even the ratings agencies led to massive losses in the accounting scandals in early last decade and in the financial collapse later on.
So when it comes to your money, how can you trust anyone but yourself these days?
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