barmar, on 2014-January-13, 11:10, said:
It's not I who makes these decisions. But during the 2008 financial crisis, huge financial institutions like JP Morgan Chase and AIG were considered too big to fail, even though they caused the crisis in the first place. The government has also bailed out most of the car companies.
If a company like GM went out of business, huge numbers of workers would lose their jobs, dealer franchises would go out of business because they had no cars to sell, and there would be ripple effects down the supply chain. The workers without jobs would stop paying income taxes, the businesses would stop paying corporate taxes. Yeah, eventually other companies will increase their production to make up for it, and they'll hire many of these workers to build them. But that will take quite a bit of time, and crisis until that happens would probably be much worse than the recession we went into 5 years ago.
I'm not an economist, I can't really be sure of the magnitude, this is just my intuitive, lay opinion. But it seemed like most economists were in favor of the bailouts, because the alternative would be much worse.
I'm not an economist either but some things need to be noticed.
In Canada, " in order to save jobs" the government handed over millions of dollars to companies who were threatening to move out of the country. At least two of them moved out of the country anyway asap. So what exactly did we gain for all that taxpayer money? A few months worth of work..it would likely have been cheaper and more productive to give it to the workers instead, to retrain or to start new small businesses. Polls consistently say most people want to do that and even though most of those may fail, it's small businesses which keep a country alive, not the monolithic ones which replace as many workers as possible as quickly as possible with robotics etc.
We have bailed out subsidiaries of American car companies twice (Ford only once ..so far..)yet have still fallen from 3rd to eleventh in production. Air Canada has been bailed out at least twice, and Blue Sky, a huge conglomerate of pig farms which was finally sold to new investors last year, had been bailed out by taxpayer money twice just in the four or so years previously. If bailing out companies works, why does it need to be redone?
As an aside, taxpayer money was simultaneously being given to Blue Sky to keep them going at the same time as small pig farmers were being paid pennies on the dollar to kill their breeding sows because of overproduction of pigs.
Why is it that for the companies which employ many workers some form of the following is apparently never up for consideration?
" It's really too bad you can't meet your obligations and have to close down shop. I guess we will have to take it over and keep it going with the workers who are already doing the job, and promote some of them to management with a panel of expert advisors to help. Good luck now, you hear?"
Is it that McCarthyism still exerts a gangrenous influence over common sense or something else?
It seems as though there is almost a deliberate decision to ignore the concept of consequences. Yet Pavlov clearly demonstrated that consequences drive learning. What do you suppose the bankers who walked away from the debacle they were responsible for, have learned? to say nothing of everyone else, corporate or individual, who was watching this?
Perhaps the problem is that it is a whole lot simpler to hand a whack of money over to one entity than to deal with hundreds. Too bad nobody seems to have noticed that bailouts "because the company is too big to fail" seem to be ineffective at best and even if passively, encourage huge companies to be careless if not actually misbehave at worst.