What is probably the most outrageous part of the whole deal, from a social justice standpoint, is that the UAW got GM stock in exchange for concessions--while GM bondholders lost about 2/3 of the values of their bonds, in exchange for stock that they do not yet have. Generally, the rule is that the order of priority in settling up at bankruptcy is taxes, outstanding wages, secured debts, bondholders, preferred stockholders, common stockholders, unsecured debts. Why did UAW get a better deal than bondholders? Who elected Obama? (And don't let Bush off the hook on this--this stupidity started as Bush's project.)
Conservative. Idaho. Software engineer. Historian. Trying to prevent Idiocracy from becoming a documentary.
Email complaints/requests about copyright infringement to clayton @ claytoncramer.com. Reminder: the last copyright troll that bothered me went bankrupt.
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Why Bankruptcy For GM Would Have Been The Better Solution
John Lott's November 18, 2010 column at Fox News points out the absurdity of the U.S. government's bailout of General Motors--a maneuver more about protecting preferred stock and unions than about the best interests of the economy.
What is probably the most outrageous part of the whole deal, from a social justice standpoint, is that the UAW got GM stock in exchange for concessions--while GM bondholders lost about 2/3 of the values of their bonds, in exchange for stock that they do not yet have. Generally, the rule is that the order of priority in settling up at bankruptcy is taxes, outstanding wages, secured debts, bondholders, preferred stockholders, common stockholders, unsecured debts. Why did UAW get a better deal than bondholders? Who elected Obama? (And don't let Bush off the hook on this--this stupidity started as Bush's project.)
What is probably the most outrageous part of the whole deal, from a social justice standpoint, is that the UAW got GM stock in exchange for concessions--while GM bondholders lost about 2/3 of the values of their bonds, in exchange for stock that they do not yet have. Generally, the rule is that the order of priority in settling up at bankruptcy is taxes, outstanding wages, secured debts, bondholders, preferred stockholders, common stockholders, unsecured debts. Why did UAW get a better deal than bondholders? Who elected Obama? (And don't let Bush off the hook on this--this stupidity started as Bush's project.)
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment