After seven-plus years of stubborn certainty, the Decider suddenly reversed himself today on two major issues–the $700 financial bailout and relations with North Korea.
In a deathbed conversion to consensus, the Administration stepped back from the Paulson Plan to buy toxic mortgage-backed securities and moved toward injecting capital directly into the nation’s banks, a position it opposed during two turbulent weeks of persuading Congress to pass the original bill.
Since then, the meltdown of financial markets has sounded a resounding “no” to the Paulson Plan and, at the start of today’s Washington meetings of world financial leaders, President Bush indicated with customary vagueness that the US would follow the lead of Great Britain, which took action this week to unlock credit markets by putting money into banks and guaranteeing loans between them.
Details will differ from country to country but, as Paul Krugman has pointed out, the “rescue announced by the British government this week provides a useful template. It offers to insure up to about $425 billion worth of new bank debt, forces banks to raise new equity capital and makes government money available to buy equity.”
















