Latest update: 30/09/2008 
- financial crisis - George W. Bush

Key points of the US bailout plan
The bailout plan proposed by US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson includes a 700 billion-dollar rescue package designed in the wake of high-profile bank failures. Here are the key elements of the deal.

The Treasury Department is pushing for a bank rescue plan which would allow it to buy up to $700 billion in troubled securities to soothe global credit markets. Key elements of the plan follow:
 

- The $700 billion in buying power would be doled out by Congress in stages. After the first $250 billion is authorized, the President could request another $100 billion. The final $350 billion could be cleared by a further act of Congress.
 
- Eligible assets include residential or commercial mortgages and related instruments which were originated or issued on or before March 14, 2008. Other financial instruments can be included in consultation with the Federal Reserve if Congress is notified.
 
- Treasury secretary given broad discretion to determine the methods for buying assets.
 
- Foreign central banks, or institutions owned by a foreign government, cannot take part.
 
- The government will take a stake in companies that tap federal aid so that taxpayers can share in the profits if those companies get back on their feet. An exception applies to financial firms that offload less than $100 million of soured investments.
 
- If a company receives aid but fails, the government will be one of the last investors to see a loss.
 
- A new congressional panel would have oversight power and the Treasury secretary would report regularly to lawmakers in two elements of a multi-level oversight apparatus.
 
- If the Treasury takes a stake in a company, the top five executives would be subject to limits on their compensation.
 
- Executives hired after a financial company offloads more than $300 million in assets via auction to the government will not be eligible for "golden parachutes."
 
- Would permit the Federal Reserve to begin paying interest on bank reserves from Oct. 1, giving it another tool for easing credit strains.
 
- Mandates a study on the impact of mark-to-market accounting standards, that critics blame for a downward spiral in the valuation of assets on corporate balance sheets.
 
- The federal government may stall foreclosure proceedings on home loans purchased under the plan.
 
- Alongside the plan to buy securities outright, the Treasury Department will conceive an alternative insurance program that would underwrite troubled loans and would be paid for by participating companies.
 
- If the government has taken losses five years into the program, the Treasury Department will draft a plan to tax the companies that took part to recoup taxpayer losses.

Comments (1)

Analyisis? What analysis

Please find someone with more than a grade school education to do France 24's pathetic 'analysis' of the Congressional Bailout for the US Banks. Your reporting is simply dismal & misses the fact that the entire document is so weakly worded that any lawyer could ride a coach & horses thru it! In effect its the first documented coup d'etat by the worlds financial elite over the so-called democratic process. If that isnt news what is? Never mind the $700 billion now - what about the projected $11 trillion shortfall?

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