Quantcast Oregon Daily Emerald - University of Oregon news, sports & entertainment
College Media Network
  • Blogs
  • Calendar
  • Archives
  • Buy Photos
  • Advertising
  • Classifieds
  • Contact Us

|

Home > News

Sold to U.S. taxpayers for $700 B: banks' bad assets

by Ryan Knutson | Senior news editor

PUBLISHED ON 9/29/08 IN News
  • Print
  • Email
  • Page 1 of 1
What's the problem on Wall Street?

Banks gave loans to people who couldn't make payments. In order to make money, the banks sold the loans to other investors. As these borrowers rapidly began defaulting on their loans, each bank and investor ran out of money. As a result, banks do not have the required capital to make new loans, which puts the banks dangerously close to insolvency. Banks have not only slowed lending to individuals and businesses, they have stopped making loans to each other. The rescue plan should help restore confidence in financial markets.

What happened Sunday?

The Bush administration and key lawmakers agreed on a bailout plan for the growing number of failing banks. The plan is an altered version of the one suggested by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson last week. Taxpayers will immediately give $250 billion to the Treasury Department to start buying up bad loans from banks. If needed, an additional $100 billion is available at the discretion of the president, and a final $350 billion is on the table, unless Congress resolves to take it back. The president has the authority to veto such a resolution.

Why should my tax dollars bailout rich guys on Wall Street?

Because if the banks collapse, it will be almost impossible to get a loan, which would essentially freeze the economy.

What's next?

The plan goes to the House for a vote Monday, and is expected to pass the Senate on Wednesday.

rknutson@dailyemerald.com
The Associated Press contributed to this report
Page 1 of 1

Article Tools

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.


MULTIMEDIA
MORE MULTIMEDIA

AP NEWS VIDEO

READER POLL

Should the City of Portland Planning Commission approve the proposal to change Portland’s ‘Made in Oregon’ sign to read ‘University of Oregon’?

Submit Vote

VIEW RESULTS

Advertisement




Sponsored Links

Home Services Guides

Sex Toys

Advertisement