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The Repairman's Burden

by: Eugene Robinson  |  The Washington Post

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Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner. (Photo: Susan Walsh / AP)

    Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is a repairman, not a revolutionary. Contrary to the impression he sometimes gives, he does understand why the Sun King excesses of Wall Street's pampered executives make people so angry. Essentially, though, he blames the players, not the game.

    "We still have a system that has been exceptionally good, better than any other, in getting capital to the guy who has an idea," Geithner said yesterday in an interview. Hours earlier, he had rolled out his long-awaited plan to get credit flowing through the economy again; after my last question, he dashed from his Treasury office to the White House next door for a meeting with President Obama and the rest of his economic team. They had good news to talk about, for a change: At least initially, the markets reacted favorably to Geithner's proposal to enlist private capital in cleansing the system of paralyzing "toxic" assets.

    The grandees of Wall Street have every incentive to do anything they can to bolster Geithner's position, since he's the kindly sheriff who stands between them and the snarling mob at the gate.

    But Wall Street seems to have gone out of its way to make Geithner's job more difficult. The "retention" bonuses at the insurance giant AIG - to which the government has made available an astounding $170 billion in aid - dominated the news cycle for a full week. On Thursday, we learned that Citigroup, recipient of $45 billion in bailout money, had decided to spend $10 million renovating its executive offices. Yesterday ABC News revealed that J.P. Morgan Chase planned to spend $138 million on two new corporate jets and improvements to its hangar at the Westchester, N.Y., airport; the company later said that it won't proceed with the project until it has paid back its $25 billion in bailout money.

    Geithner noted that the use of government resources to rescue Wall Street from its own foolish bets and boneheaded decisions actually began in late 2007. "Even after that, you had people making stunningly awful judgments" about corporate compensation and perks, Geithner said. "It makes it much harder for us."

    From Obama on down, the administration is displaying little enthusiasm for attempts in Congress to recover the $165 million in AIG bonuses through narrowly written tax legislation. Wall Street executives have been sputtering at the thought of "retroactive" taxation and grumbling that if this is the way things are going to be, they might decide to steer clear of any new government programs. Geithner needs Wall Street's participation for his financial rescue plan to work.

    But it seems to me that Wall Street should be the lesser of his worries. Geithner's plan offers private investors the opportunity to reap relatively big gains by taking relatively small risks. Some of the risk is assumed by taxpayers. Christina Romer, head of the Council of Economic Advisers, said over the weekend that these private firms will be doing the government a favor by participating in the program. But that's wrong. Investors will participate because they think they can make money. The only entity that's doing anyone a favor - make that doing everyone a favor - is the government of the United States.

    "We can't solve the financial crisis without the government taking risks," Geithner said. An alternative approach in which the government would take over all the "toxic" assets would saddle taxpayers with more risk rather than less, he argued. But it's unrealistic to expect citizens, having already poured more than $1 trillion into the Wall Street sinkhole, to react well when money managers haughtily make demands and set conditions.

    Geithner has not been impressive as a performer. He talks so fast that it's hard for listeners to keep up. Grand settings, such as his ornate office, seem to swallow him up.

    He does have a vision, though. He sees, eventually, a reformed financial system in which the "too big to fail" behemoths such as AIG or Citigroup are required to run their businesses in a more conservative fashion. He sees better regulation and more transparency, so that hedge funds are not so opaque and the derivatives markets are not left unsupervised to run amok.

    The goal that Geithner describes sounds like an improved system but not one that is fundamentally different from the system we have now. If populism is resurgent in the land, it doesn't get past Geithner's desk. Wall Street should be toasting the guy - but with beer, not champagne.

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What on earth is the

What on earth is the relationship between the trading of derivatives, toxic assets, bad mortgages, excessive bonuses, and "getting capital to the guy with an idea"??? Mr. Geithner, get your metaphors organized, please. Rampant, unregulated 'capitalism' can not be justified by comparing it to the spirit of free enterprise. They are two vastly different things. Tossing out the likes of AIG will have NO effect on the abilities of "idea men" to raise capital for their ventures. The archaic view of the stock market as a means of raising money to get entrepreneurial start-ups going is tommyrot. Very, very few start-ups get money from "the markets". The stock market is a casino for its promoters and those who can afford to play on a regular basis. Raising money for ventures by "guys with ideas" has almost never worked via the stock market. And, further, what the hell has the stock market to do with the machinations of the likes of AIG, Goldman Sachs, Bear Stearns, etc. etc. NOTHING. Wake up America!

The article failed to

The article failed to fulfill it's promise. It IS the wrong game. Instead of re-re-reviving Zombie banks and corporations, why not make the Fed genuinely Federal? Let's bypass the outrageous ("boneheaded"} corporations and get the capital flowing into the economy. Oh, I forgot! That would be Nationalization, which is Socialism, which is akin to Communism, with echoes of Hugo Chavez and Fidel Castro. EEK! We need a anew team. Why Obama keeps drawing from the polluted Goldman Sachs well of "talent" is either mystifying or suspicious: too large a source of his campaign war chest? We need people like Sheila Bair, Paul Krugman, Joseph Stiglitz. I fear for Obama's presidency, and more I fear for the future of this declining Empire. But maybe that's what the world needs.

Repairman? Crook is a better

Repairman? Crook is a better description of this former Goldman Sachs exec. These guys are robbing us blind, and you lay this blatant puff piece on us? Come on Alternet -- you can do better.

I supported Obama, Voted for

I supported Obama, Voted for him, Tried to convince many to do the same. I still support him more than any other President in my 50+ year life span... My hopes for his success are very big indeed.... And, I want to give Geithner a chance for no other reason than Obama chose him..., But..., I just can't bring myself to believe in a 'Repairman'..., as he is decscribed in this article.... I prefer someone along the lines of a Paul Krugman, only better, like a similar mind and mindset in more of a younger body and mind with all the confidence and aspirations of youth, logic and vision that comes with such mature, intelligent youth... Obama often injects visions of opportunity for great changes in his speeches... I think Geithner does not reflect such in Obama's choice of him for the job at hand. I have ben for over a year now and still am hoping for BIG, BOLD changes from Obama going forward, including all the way down to bringing about a new, bare bones vision to the entire world of just what a Global Economy really is in this Brave New World of Global Economic Catastrophe, Global Warming, Global Economic Realignment, Shifting Global Power Centers, A Huge and Rapidly Growing Global Population amid ever scarcer resources... This is not a time for half measures. Its not a time for Repairmen from what should already be thought of as a bygone era. ALL THIS '''ECONOMIC DISASTER''' around us could and should all be Retranslated by The VISIONARY Obama we believe in into a '''Time of Great Opportunity for all Mankind'''---- Obama needs to seize on this while his Political Capital is so strong........ SO--- Shoot the Wad President Obama--- Be a VERY VERY VERY BOLD MAN AND VISIONARY... SCREW THE 'NEXT ELECTION STRATEGIES' --- LET IT ALL RIDE ON '''ALL NEW'''... BRING IN THE NEW PEOPLE, IDEAS AND THINGS FROM WHEREVER YOU FIND THEM---- AND BELIEVE IN YOURSELF, THEM AND THOSE OF US WHO ARE WITH YOU TO REMAIN ONBOARD WITH YOU... BECAUSE A VERY BIG '''MUCH''' OF THE WORLD IS WITH YOU..!... BE THAT GUY WHO REALLY DID COME ALONG AND CHANGE THE WORLD....!

I agree with r. bridge. When

I agree with r. bridge. When hedge funds were offering 30-35% for derivatives capital fled from manufacturing. That's part of the reason that we lost good-paying jobs in this country. The US was about money, not about goods and services. It was and is a wrong idea that Mr. Geithner has, but it's all part of the same idea Obama apparently shares --fundamentally capitalism is just fine [the game] but every once in a while you got bad actors who screw it up. Wrong. Wall Street is a crap shoot and it plays with people's lives by lying [fudging profit statements, Arthur Anderson, Enron, should have been a klaxon going off in everybody's heads]. Your company stops giving pensions, so you put your money in a 401K for your retirement. You were sold a "solid investment," not a Vegas slot game. The only way one can not see the inherent damage in that is to regard human beings as not even ants but grains of inanimate sand. Dirt maybe. The Wall St people will call it "the end of the individual." Unfortunately, it's not the end of anything because Obama believes in the "better angels" of people who are just thieves with an absolute conviction of their entitlement and who behave as if not to allow them to rip us off is some kind of crime against "free enterprise" that will lead to what? gulags? As if the right wing pro-business Chamber of Commerce people haven't had their own kind of dictatorship. It's nuts and it needs to be utterly changed.