Shock, shock. It looks like taxpayers won't get their money
back from TARP. Who would have imagined that!?
Reports ABC
News:
Nearly one year after Congress approved the
$700 billion financial bailout, it was attacked by
Republicans and fiscal watchdogs as an expensive failure that
has not stopped home foreclosures or jobs from disappearing.
"This has been a failed program," Sen. Mike Johanns, R-Neb.,
said at today's
Senate Banking committee hearing. "The very promises made
to the taxpayer of what was going to happen with this money, in
my judgment, have not been kept."
Johanns cited what he called "very damning" testimony by the
bailout's
Special Inspector General Neil Barofsky that said it is
"extremely unlikely" that American taxpayers will get a full
return on their $700 billion investment. Moreover, Barofsky
observed, the
Troubled Asset Relief Program has failed to increase bank
lending, stop rising unemployment, or stem the rash of home
foreclosures.
"In the last year," said the Congressional Oversight Panel's
Elizabeth Warren, "the apprehension that pervaded this country
has turned into something else: frustration and anger. Today's
fragile stability has come at an enormous cost to the American
people." Barofsky noted
that "a lot of this frustration and cynicism and anger comes
out of the lack of transparency in the TARP program." This, he
said, was his group's "biggest frustration" with the Treasury Department and "one of
the great failures of the past year."
About the Author
Doug Bandow is a Senior Fellow at the Cato Institute and the Senior Fellow in International Religious Persecution at the Institute on Religion and Public Policy. A former Special Assistant to President Ronald Reagan, he is author of Beyond Good Intentions: A Biblical View of Politics (Crossway).