How big is too big? Best left for the Secretary of the Treasury to answer.
How do you define too big? There are many criteria one can use:
- Capitalization: What was the smallest company that NEEDED to be bailed out this time around? Limit should be set there for starters.
- Number of employees: can the country suffer the loss of that many jobs if the company goes under?
- Retirement stakes: how will retirement funds - through mutual funds, as well as employee retirement programs, - fare, if the company fails?
- Industry position: what would be the effect of the company's failure on various industries, and the trickle-down effect into the economy?
- And probably many other criteria I'm not thinking about right now.
I propose that regulation should be optional.
- If a company opts to be regulated, then it will be, and in case of failure the government will rescue it. All stakeholders will be safe.
- If a company opts to not be regulated, then in case of failure the company will be left to fold and its stakeholders lose.
Asbed
Newt Gingrich said it right - You can't have capitalism on the way up and socialism on the way down.
ReplyDeleteI don't think knee jerk reactions like more regulation etc will help
on the long term. When the times are bad, everyone agrees, and 30 years later, someone like Regan will come and say something like - The most fearsome words are "I'm from the govt and I'm here to help".
What needs to be better defined is how companies that are too big can prevent themselves from failing. It's not fun to have to bail out these suckers on tax payers coin. And honestly, isn't it better that some of these guys actually fail anyway?
Going by the current fiscal mindset in DC right now, will the white house push to bail out the state of California? I mean they bailed out
companies with far lesser messes than what we have here.
Heck, sometimes I think the SAC legislators are hoping for that and
making sure they do absolutely nothing so that DC has no choice.
Hriday.