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- <text id=89TT1643>
- <link 93AC0257>
- <link 90TT0815>
- <link 90TT0627>
- <title>
- June 26, 1989: Don't Touch My Bailout
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- June 26, 1989 Kevin Costner:The New American Hero
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 56
- Don't Touch My Bailout
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Bush's tough S&L bill survives an industry challenge
- </p>
- <p> When renegade House Republicans made a last-ditch attempt to
- soften President Bush's tough savings-and-loan bailout bill last
- week, there was nothing wimpy about his response. As the House
- debated the legislation, the President corralled congressional
- leaders and took his cause to the people. "It is time for the
- American public and our Administration to say that enough is
- enough," Bush said. If the House weakened the stringent new
- regulations of the bill, the President warned, he would veto it.
- By week's end Bush prevailed when the House approved a strong
- bailout bill by a vote of 320 to 97. In all, 46 Republicans voted
- against the measure. Since the Senate passed a similar version in
- April, Bush's plan to rescue the thrift industry is likely to go
- into effect next month.
- </p>
- <p> The plan, which will cost some $157 billion over the next ten
- years, will allow the Government to close down or sell off more
- than 500 insolvent savings institutions. To reform the rest of the
- thrift industry, the bill tightens capital requirements so that S&L
- owners would have more of their own money on the line.
- Specifically, the bill calls for all thrifts immediately to post
- $1.50 in reserves for each $100 in deposits and reach a level of
- $3 in reserves by 1994.
- </p>
- <p> The most controversial provision is that thrifts would no
- longer be allowed to count as capital an intangible asset known as
- "goodwill." Typically, this comes into play when an acquirer buys
- an ailing S&L whose liabilities exceed its assets; the difference
- is called goodwill. So far, regulators have allowed S&L buyers
- to count goodwill as capital in exchange for taking the failed
- thrift out of the Government's hands. But having no capital of
- their own at stake enabled some thrift owners to make risky and
- often fraudulent loans without sufficient cash to back them up.
- Said New York Democrat Charles Schumer: "The S&L industry has
- been playing a giant game of roulette, and they have been gambling
- with taxpayers' money. Without tough capital rules, we will be
- telling these high-flying speculators, `O.K., go back to the
- casinos.'"
- </p>
- <p> The House vote was a sharp blow to S&L industry lobbyists,
- whose lavish courtship of Congressmen fostered in the mid-1980s
- permissive legislation that is blamed for aggravating the thrift
- crisis. The industry fought to weaken the capital requirements in
- the current bill by pushing an amendment, sponsored by Illinois
- Republican Henry Hyde, that would have allowed S&Ls a regulatory
- hearing before they could be forced to comply with the new
- standards. Hyde, the industry's most vociferous advocate, is a
- leading recipient of S&L PAC contributions. After Bush threatened
- to veto the bill if capital standards were weakened, the amendment
- was firmly defeated.
- </p>
- <p> Bush did suffer one setback. He had hoped to finance $50
- billion of the cost of the bailout with 30-year bonds issued by a
- new Government agency, the Resolution Trust Corporation, which will
- handle the sale of the assets of the 500 insolvent thrifts. Since
- the bonds will be sold by the RTC rather than the Treasury, Bush
- hoped they would be classified "off budget," meaning they would not
- be counted as part of the federal deficit. But by carrying that
- designation, they would have paid a higher interest rate than
- Government bonds. That extra interest expense would increase the
- overall cost of the bailout plan by an estimated $5 billion. The
- House refused to go along with that sleight of hand and voted to
- include the $50 billion in the federal budget. But the House
- exempted the S&L spending from deficit limits set by the
- Gramm-Rudman-Hollings law. Bush hopes to keep the financing
- off-budget when the House and Senate bills are reconciled in a
- conference committee.
- </p>
- <p> While the bailout plan may reassure S&L depositors, the tough
- capital requirements will spell trouble for many marginal thrifts.
- James Barth, chief economist of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board,
- which regulates S&Ls, estimates that 674 thrifts, or almost
- one-fourth of all federally insured U.S. savings institutions,
- would fail to meet the new capital standards. As a result, many
- thrifts would be forced to liquidate or combine with healthier
- institutions.
- </p>
- <p> One persistent criticism of the Bush plan is that it fails to
- provide as much money for the bailout as will eventually be needed.
- By some estimates, the cost of cleaning up the industry could
- exceed $300 billion over 30 years, with taxpayers picking up
- two-thirds of the bill. The FHLBB reported last week that the 2,938
- Government-insured thrifts in the U.S. posted losses of $3.4
- billion during the first quarter of the year. Observes Alex
- Sheshunoff, an industry analyst: "There's a lot more bad news to
- come." In the S&L industry, unfortunately, the most pessimistic
- forecasts usually turn out to be the most accurate ones.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-