RAY SUAREZ: Professor Cochrane, you hear your two colleagues talking about having to do something to avoid a full-blown panic. What would you suggest instead?JOHN COCHRANE: Well, there's lots of things we can do instead, but neither of them said how this is going to work. Every story I've heard involves at some point magic steps in.
This argument so far was, "Well, we have to do something to restore confidence." That's just magic. If this bill is going to pass, let's hear how, in fact, it is going to restore that confidence.
There's plenty we can do instead. Basically, banks need more capital. And before that can happen, the old capital -- stockholders and some long-term debt -- are going to have lose a lot of money. And they're crying that they don't want to do that.
RAY SUAREZ: Restoration of confidence is magic?
SCHEHERAZADE REHMAN: No, but it is absolutely critical. A car accident victim is bleeding, we have to stop the hemorrhaging first and then debate about how to stitch him up, what bandage to use, which hospital to take him, and which specialized doctor to use.
And I think that there is going to be some very technical, detailed discussions following this. But if the panic is not stopped, Middle America gets hit again on Friday, if there is a no vote.
RAY SUAREZ: Well, reassurance is hard to quantify on a balance sheet. What does confidence do that stops that hemorrhaging, that stops that panicking?
SCHEHERAZADE REHMAN: I think, as the previous speaker said, the $250,000 limit now on FDIC has eased fears of banks and their customers that perhaps we are covered a little bit more. And so that builds up confidence.
The amount could be $600 billion or $900 billion. It doesn't matter. It's restoring the confidence that somebody's in there, the federal government, to bail these companies out, rightly or wrongly.
RAY SUAREZ: Professor Cochrane, what about the raise in the FDIC-covered amount in accounts? Do you favor that?
JOHN COCHRANE: I'm all for that, yes. I'm all for that. And your viewers need to understand there is no need for anyone to run to the bank and empty their bank-insured bank accounts. Ordinary depositors are not at risk here, and that's a very good part of this bill, the one good part.
RAY SUAREZ: Well, tepid praise there.
Ken Rogoff?
KENNETH ROGOFF: Well, I mean, I certainly don't think this is the end. This is a step. It is not going to work. It is not going to be enough.
Eventually, we have to do something like Professor Cochrane suggests of injecting capital into the banks in return for senior equity, putting the taxpayer first.
We've got to close a lot of the banking system. The banking system is still bloated. They have to get auditors in there to choose which banks close. It's going to take much firmer intervention.
There are other plans. There are some involving helping the homeowners directly.
This is not the last word. The final cost is actually going to be much greater than what's projected from this bill, but we're in paralysis here.
The spreads are exploding. Companies are having trouble meeting their payrolls, if we don't get the credit markets moving. You can't just, you know, talk about theoretically what's the best thing to do. You have to stop the bleeding.