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- <text id=89TT3300>
- <link 90TT2526>
- <link 89TT0490>
- <title>
- Dec. 18, 1989: Warning:Further Federal Bailouts Ahead
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Dec. 18, 1989 Money Laundering
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 40
- Warning: Further -- and Maybe Bigger -- Federal Bailouts Ahead
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Risky loans and sloppy supervision could lead to crises that
- dwarf the $300 billion savings and loan fiasco
- </p>
- <p> After more than two troubled years as the Government's top
- savings and loan regulator, M. Danny Wall fell victim to the
- nation's spreading S&L scandal. The clamor for his ouster
- mounted last month after lower-ranking bank examiners told
- Congress that Wall had unduly delayed for 21 months a Government
- takeover of high-flying financier Charles Keating's Lincoln
- Savings & Loan Association, whose collapse could cost taxpayers
- $2.5 billion. Last week Wall finally bowed to the pressure and
- resigned as director of the Office of Thrift Supervision. He had
- been victimized, Wall complained, by "simplistic efforts to find
- a scapegoat to shoulder the blame for the entire thrift crisis."
- </p>
- <p> That crisis could soon become worse, because new
- requirements designed to strengthen the thrifts could instead
- push many of them into extinction. Starting last week, S&Ls must
- greatly increase their capitalization as a hedge against losses
- from problem loans, interest-rate swings and bad investment
- decisions. Among other things, they will be required to maintain
- "risk-based capital" equal to 6.4% of their risky assets, such
- as shopping centers and fancy resorts. Because many thrifts are
- only marginally profitable, raising the funds to meet the
- standards may prove impossible for them. Some analysts warn that
- half the nation's 2,900 thrifts could eventually fail or be
- merged, voluntarily or involuntarily, adding billions to the
- $300 billion cost of the industry bailout. An early casualty:
- City Federal Savings Bank, New Jersey's largest thrift, was
- taken over by federal regulators on Friday, after recording huge
- losses from real estate ventures.
- </p>
- <p> Before the ominous S&L predictions had a chance to sink in,
- alarms were going off about other potentially monumental
- crises. A report by Budget Director Richard Darman warned that
- careless management at such agencies as the Veterans
- Administration and the Department of Energy may have allowed
- scandals rivaling the estimated $8 billion imbroglio at the
- Department of Housing and Urban Development to go undetected.
- But the gravest worries were triggered by concerns about the
- solvency of more than $5 trillion in federal credit and
- insurance programs that cover everything from bank deposits to
- student loans and Third World aid. While no one expects all such
- programs to fail, bad debts and write-offs are steadily
- increasing. "Losses from these programs have already cost the
- taxpayers tens of billions of dollars and have had a significant
- impact on the federal deficit," warns Charles Bowsher, the U.S.
- Comptroller General. Adds Michigan Democrat John Dingell, who
- chairs a House subcommittee on oversight and investigations: "It
- is as if every man, woman and child in this country each
- co-signed a personal loan for $20,000."
- </p>
- <p> The most disturbing fact is that no one knows how severe
- the problems may be. In a report to Congress last month, the
- General Accounting Office described the same pattern of sloppy
- accounting and slack Government supervision that allowed the S&L
- debacle to go unchecked. Because many agencies kept such poor
- books, GAO auditors could not even determine how much of the $5
- trillion is at risk of default. "The ignorance, incompetence and
- corruption in many of the Government loan and loan-guarantee
- programs are appalling," says Dingell.
- </p>
- <p> Where GAO investigators managed to decipher an agency's
- accounts, they often found a far grimmer picture than the
- agency provided. While the Federal Housing Administration, which
- insures home mortgages, reported a loss of $858 million in 1988,
- GAO auditors found that the shortfall was actually $4.2 billion.
- </p>
- <p> There is also concern over the Pension Benefit Guaranty
- Corp., which insures the private pension plans of 66 million
- Americans and is currently $1.5 billion in the red. Raymond
- Maria, the Labor Department's acting inspector general, warned
- Congress last month that lax Federal Government supervision and
- law enforcement "has created a window of opportunity for those
- who would embezzle and steal from plan participants." But
- policing pensions is virtually impossible because the Labor
- Department has about 300 inspectors for nearly 900,000 plans
- nationwide. Says Maria: "Our goal is not to frighten people
- unnecessarily but to stimulate concern where it is needed and
- to avoid potential future crises. We do not want to be in the
- position of saying, `I told you so.'"
- </p>
- <p> No programs have been growing faster than so-called
- Government-Sponsored Enterprises, which include such entities
- as the Federal National Mortgage Association and the Student
- Loan Marketing Association. Taxpayers may be called on to bail
- out any GSEs that get into financial trouble, as they were when
- the Farm Credit System amassed huge losses during the rural
- crisis of the mid-1980s. The Government has also increasingly
- shifted funds from direct-loan programs, which worsen the budget
- deficit, to loan guarantees, which don't show up on the budget
- until borrowers default.
- </p>
- <p> Few critics of the credit and insurance programs doubt
- their social value. Among other benefits, they have made homes
- more affordable, enhanced educational opportunities and rescued
- Chrysler and New York City from bankruptcy. But the sprawling
- programs are spread over dozens of federal agencies and receive
- scant congressional oversight. Like the once obscure S&Ls that
- now make headlines almost daily, these ambitious federal
- programs run the risk of getting dangerously out of hand -- if
- they have not already.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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