Marketplace

Search

Monday, February 23, 2009

Listen to the show

Give banks vouchers so we get bucks

Benjamin Barber

President Obama says taxpayer bucks that will go to the banks must be passed on to businesses or individuals for credit. Commentator Benjamin Barber offers one solution to ensure that we really do see the money: vouchers.

Benjamin Barber (Benjamin Barber)

More on Commentaries, America's Financial Crisis

TEXT OF STORY

Bob Moon: Don't bother stopping me if you've heard this one before -- The government has some new ideas for shoring up the nation's banking system. President Obama has promised that taxpayer bucks which go to banks in the next round must be passed on, to provide credit to businesses and individuals. But the plan to commit more than $1.5 trillion more in public and private funds is short on details so far. How do we make sure we won't have to live through Groundhog Day all over again? Commentator Ben Barber has an idea.


BEJAMIN BARBER: Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner has offered a second phase bank bailout plan that is mostly carrots and no sticks.

Trouble is without sticks, the banks are likely to figure out how to hang on to the big bucks the way they did the first time around last fall. So here's another proposal that no free market zealot can object to: vouchers.

That's right, let's submit the banks to the privatizing discipline of vouchers to which schools have been made to submit. Give the banks the big bucks, but make it so they have no choice but to, well, pass the buck -- the bucks -- on to you and me. Sort of like food stamps, you gotta spend them on food.

It won't be the dreaded feds but the banks that will negotiate and administer the loans. But they will have to work with federal vouchers that can be redeemed only when they are credited to a client who has obtained a home mortgage or car loan or business credit.

Sorry, Mr. Bank CEO, but the vouchers can't be used to pay salaries or bonuses, and are not redeemable for merger and acquisition deals. And if we put a shelf limit of say three to six months on them, these vouchers can't be held in a safe as insurance against future debts and losses when those packages of bad debt are finally opened and evaluated. The banks will have a simple choice: use 'em or lose 'em!

So there it is: The banks get the vouchers, but we the people get the cash. Cause the cash is available only when a loan is approved and the banks pass on the dough to those real folks who, as credit recipients, can get the real economy moving again.

And hey, with vouchers, the government can truly pass the buck without worrying that the buck will stop with the banks. And Tim Geitner can relax because nobody will be able to call him a bank nationalizer or accuse Larry Summers of socialist leanings.

Comments

  • Comment | Refresh

  • By John Hennings

    03/01/2009

    Yes, BUT...the banks have to have skin in the game, or they'll make loans to any goofball that shows up. There was a charity in Little Rock in the '90s that would give private school vouchers to inner city parents, but they wouldn't pay more than half the tuition. The parents made the kids try harder when their own cash was invested.

    By S.J. Phred

    02/24/2009

    So who will these vouchers go to? The people who already have old loans they can't pay off? The home owners who want to pull of "jingle loans" (they get a new loan for a new house, and send the keys to the old house to the bank, and take the credit hit)?

    Will vouchers balance the bad loans still sitting in the books, and make the banks look solid?

    By Samuel Jang

    From Glendale, CA, 02/24/2009

    Mr.Barber's suggestion is defacto nationalization that will NOT fix the "credit freeze". As Mr. Barber describes it, the government would be dictating how the capital from the vouchers should be allocated to the economy, as the vouchers must be used for home mortgages, auto loans, or business credit. This would result in capital not flowing to deserving projects that would yield the highest return - and thus aid in economic recovery, but to interest groups that scream that loudest. At best, the banks will not accept the vouchers - or if they do, capital will be inefficiently deployed and the economy will stall at any chance of recovery.

    By Rosemary Young

    From WA, 02/23/2009

    well this idea is the best one I've heard, so I sent a message to the www.whitehouse.gov about it! Hope they listen.

    By Earl Nordstrom

    From Chardon, OH, 02/23/2009

    Wow give the banks a voucher what a great idea . Finally someone with a brain. I really hope a lot of people herd this I certanly passed it to all my friends. Now how to we get Geitner to listen to it?

    By Larry Buxbaum

    From Lansdowne, PA, 02/23/2009

    The voucher idea sounds good but... It will only work if banks are not already lending as much as the vouchers value. Otherwise they will just save the money they were going to lend and then lend the voucher instead with no net gain in lending. For an analogy- the gov't gives out $100 Walmart giftcards. That will increase spending for sure since the cards have to be used by the end of the year, right! Not so fast! I can use the card instead of the $100 I was already going to spend on Walmart stuff (or maybe K-mart stuff). Then I put the $100 cash into the bank. Now if on the other hand I wasn't going to buy anything all year then this forces me to spend $100 this year on stuff at Walmart.

    By Danielle Clarke

    From springfield, PA, 02/23/2009

    YES YES finally some balance forced on banks who seem to have not had any for too many years. I have had to make all personal loans in business and with hard work i succeeded. This is the only way it can work. People investing in banks to make large profits or large salarys is a farce that has to be stopped one way or another. The only thing that makes money or value is the hard work of the people. Rich people who make money on the backs of hard workers are thieves and need to be thrown in jail.

    By Loren Sherman

    From New York, NY, 02/23/2009

    A very simple, innovative, and effective proposal. I heard it just now on the radio and hoped and wondered who in the government might listen to it and put it to work. I did not realize that Mr. Barber is a regular commentator on this program. I thought the book, "Consumed" was right on target, particularly on the subject our culture of infantilization.

    By Curt Fredrikson

    From Renton, WA, 02/23/2009

    Usually, I'm wordy and analytical, but, in this case: Cool! What's not to love? When does it start?

    By Henry Blair

    From Cleveland, OH, 02/23/2009

    Presumably none of these loans will be made to the same people who lead us into this mess by defaulting on earlier loans.

  • Post a Comment: Please be civil, brief and relevant.

    Email addresses are never displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments. All comments are moderated. Marketplace reserves the right to edit any comments on this site and to read them on the air if they are extra-interesting. Please read the Comment Guidelines before posting.

    * indicates required field

    *
    *
    *
     




     

    You must be 13 or over to submit information to American Public Media. The information entered into this form will not be used to send unsolicited email and will not be sold to a third party. For more information see Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy.

Music From This Show

  • Don't Worry Be Happy Bobby McFerrin Buy
  • Safety in Numbers Crack the Sky Buy
  • Two Silver Trees Calexico Buy
  • In Case the World Changes Its Mind Medeski Martin & Wood Buy
  • In the Cave Antonello Paliotti Buy
The Whiteboard »

PIIGS

Whiteboard PIIGSWatch the video

Five little PIIGS. Senior Editor Paddy Hirsch explains why problems with certain European countries' sovereign debt could blow the house down. Watch the video.

More Whiteboard Videos »

Getting Personal »
Chris Farrell

Q: Safe savings for children

We have 3 children with CD's... We want an investment timeline for them that takes us to the 18 y.o. mark for each of them. What are good options for continuing short term low risk investments? Mitch and Jeanne Read Chris Farrell's answer »

Special Reports and Series

The Big Shift »

The recession has changed our financial lives. A look at wealth and prosperity in the middle class and how we live now. Get more.

The Borrowers »

How living beyond our means helped bring down the economy. The role of personal debt in the financial crisis, and where we go from here. Get more.

More Stories & Special Reports »

The Specials

GAME: Budget Hero

Budget Hero

Think you could balance the federal budget? Play the game.

Conversations from the Corner OfficeTM

Conversations From the Corner Office

Marketplace goes one-on-one with CEOs, company founders, head honchos...

Sit in.

BLOG: The Greenwash Brigade

Environmental professionals scrutinize eco-friendly claims by businesses, governments and groups. Check out their reports.

Marketplace on iTunes U

iTunes U

Marketplace is on Apple's online education platform, iTunesU. Get free downloads in subjects like history, science, business and more. Study up

American Public Media © |   Terms and Conditions   |   Privacy Policy