October 1, 2008

Dave Ramsey’s Bailout Alternative: ‘The Common Sense Fix’

Filed under: Economy, Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 7:50 am

This is presented in its entirety, on the safe assumption that the talk-show host doesn’t mind, and wants his suggestions widely known.

I don’t agree with his proposal 100%, but I can surely live with it. It beats the daylights out of the nationalizing, corrupt group-subsidizing, blackmailing proposals being worked up in Washington (blackmail evidence is here and here).

Ramsey also has a text file of what follows and a 3-step action plan, so that those who wish to contact their representatives can use part or all of the language as a basis for contacting their representatives.

THE COMMON SENSE FIX

Years of bad decisions and stupid mistakes have created an economic nightmare in this country, but $700 billion in new debt is not the answer. As a tax-paying American citizen, I will not support any congressperson who votes to implement such a policy. Instead, I submit the following three-step Common Sense Plan.

I. INSURANCE

A. Insure the subprime bonds/mortgages with an underlying FHA-type insurance. Government-insured and backed loans would have an instant market all over the world, creating immediate and needed liquidity.

B. In order for a company to accept the government-backed insurance, they must do two things:

1. Rewrite any mortgage that is more than three months delinquent to a 6% fixed-rate mortgage.
a. Roll all back payments with no late fees or legal costs into the balance. This brings homeowners current and allows them a chance to keep their homes.
b. Cancel all prepayment penalties to encourage refinancing or the sale of the property to pay off the bad loan. In the event of foreclosure or short sale, the borrower will not be held liable
for any deficit balance. FHA does this now, and that encourages mortgage companies to go the extra mile while working with the borrower—again limiting foreclosures and ruined lives.

2. Cancel ALL golden parachutes of EXISTING and FUTURE CEOs and executive team members as long as the company holds these government-insured bonds/mortgages. This keeps underperforming executives from being paid when they don’t do their jobs.

C. This backstop will cost less than $50 billion—a small fraction of the current proposal.

II. MARK TO MARKET

A. Remove mark to market accounting rules for two years on only subprime Tier III bonds/mortgages. This keeps companies from being forced to artificially mark down bonds/mortgages below the value of the underlying mortgages and real estate.

B. This move creates patience in the market and has an immediate stabilizing effect on failing and ailing banks—and it costs the taxpayer nothing.

III. CAPITAL GAINS TAX

A. Remove the capital gains tax completely. Investors will flood the real estate and stock market in search of tax-free profits, creating tremendous—and immediate—liquidity in the markets. Again, this costs the taxpayer nothing.

B. This move will be seen as a lightning rod politically because many will say it is helping the rich. The truth is the rich will benefit, but it will be their money that stimulates the economy. This will enable all Americans to have more stable jobs and retirement investments that go up instead of down.

*************

This is not a time for envy, and it’s not a time for politics. It’s time for all of us, as Americans, to stand up, speak out, and fix this mess.

Hank Paulson, Ben Bernanke, and President Bush should be asked why Ramsey’s proposal isn’t acceptable.

5 Comments

  1. This is a great idea and there are many other great ideas by other economists that will work without putting the tax payer on the hook. The government won’t go for it because it doesn’t coincide with their big picture of govt control and the socialization of the banking system. Just listen to Frank, Pelosi, Dodd, Bush et al. They aren’t even considering alternatives. Nancy chastised the republicans on the day of the vote. SHe said she had the votes to pull this off, but 94 Democrats (she only needed 12 more) knew this was political suicide because it isn’t a long term fix.
    They have a lot of this allocated to pork projects. Including at one point giving 20% of the profits to ACORN. This is just wrong. We need a private independant non-partisan council to handle this and then present it to the Congress. These people are not economists, as we can see.

    Comment by averagejoe5 — October 1, 2008 @ 10:22 am

  2. Finally something I can agree with you on. I don’t think removal of the Capital Gains tax is necessary, but I am not an economist either.

    Comment by Mike — October 1, 2008 @ 3:34 pm

  3. [...] This plan to fix our current economic woes makes too much sense to go anywhere but nowhere. Ah, but this one has legs. [...]

    Pingback by Blog Chatter — October 1, 2008 @ 11:34 pm

  4. [...] HT to Bizzyblog. [...]

    Pingback by NixGuy.com | The Dave Ramsey Plan — October 2, 2008 @ 7:13 am

  5. Has he given this proposal to the White House? Or our reps? Or our Senators? I hope so…

    Comment by Winona — October 2, 2008 @ 9:42 am

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