- Homeless man = AIG
- Spare change = your taxes
- Mad Dog 20 20 = executive bonuses
- Did not understand financial markets? Check
- Did not understand risk associated with financial investments? Check
- Proceeded with risky financial investments anyway? Check
- OK, here’s your million bucks.
Ease my pain? I have an IRA at Fidelity that has lost $30,000 in the last 12 months. But $93 in tax credit makes it all better. Really. Thank you. Get me to buy something? Done. $92 last week on a movie (with popcorn) and a live music show (with dinner). Pure discretionary spending – just what the economy needs, right? I have officially done my part for the economic recovery. What’s holding it up? Have the rest of you done your part? Spent your $93?
So 73 AIG executives run the company into the biggest bailout ever and get $1 million (or more) for the effort. They are so successful at failing that no one has ever failed on this scale before. Well, maybe Adam and Eve, but otherwise no one! I, on the other hand, pay my bills and succeed in troubled times by being careful and conservative. I get $93. I could have had a lot more fun being irresponsible if I knew it would lead to a $1 million. A million bucks would really make a difference.
There is one thing the AIG guys got right that our government got wrong. If you’re going to give someone money, make it meaningful. $93 doesn’t cover a month’s worth of cable TV in my house. I was going to the movies whether I got that $93 or not. I just spent $95 on a plumber and $198 on a sprinkler repairman. $180 to tune up a motorcycle. $279 on motorcycle tires. $93 just isn’t enough to change my behavior.
You know how much is enough? Well, let’s start with a million bucks. I would buy a new house (or two given this market), a new car, and new appliances. I would create jobs (hire someone to clean my new houses and cut my new lawns.) I would travel. I would spend $1 million.
All the Democrats who say spending is the key to recovery would love me. All the Republicans who cling to trickledown economics would be thrilled. So give me a million bucks America and I’ll help this economy out.
Seriously, I don’t know a lot about financial markets or the risk associated with crazy investments. Surely that’s worth a million dollars?
1 comment:
A million wouldn't be enough to get a house I'd want in Connecticut. I'll take three million.
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