Currently browsing obama bailout bill

Obama Bailout: Still trying to gather momentum?

The Associated Press reports that U.S. President Barack Obama has once again met and convened with business leaders at the White House recently to tackle the issue of creating new jobs on the face of the surrent economic downtrend, all still part of the famed Obama Bailout plan.  While sources say that at best, the entire event had all the timmings and trappins of a typical and traditional political campaign, President Obama was all humanitarian and public servant about the entire issue.  He was, however, quick to dismiss the critics who maintain that the entire matter is just simply too complex and is not really quite as solvable as the president puts it.  The president has also addressed the issue regarding the health care debate, saying that the current economy is really not likely to get back on its feet if no one cares to do something about the “crushing cost of health care” today.

mortgage-bailout

The president’s discussion with the CEOs of some of the leading energy companies in the United States were mostly made up of talks on how to produce new methods of producing energy, and at the same time save it and distribute it more efficiently and at a more cost-productive manner.  The plan also needed to draw up ways to produce unique opportunities to create millions of jobs for job seekers in the U.S.  To give people an idea of just how much more jobs are needed, in the month of June alone, at least 467,000 jobs were lost, although this figure is still seen as comparatively better, with only 4,000 jobs lost every month, compared to at least 700,000 lost every month in the previous quarter.  As part of the contingency measure outlined in the Obama bailout plan, the Obama administration has taken extraordinary measure to somewhat buffer the impact of the worst recession to hit the United States and the better part of the financial world since the financial meltdown of the 1930s.  The Obama administration says it is also keen on extending aid to those who have been hit hardest by the economic turmoil.

Having said all of these, the question remains: has the great Obama Bailout finally gathered enough momentum to actually make a dent in the suffering U.S. Economy?  Or are we all just clutching at straws hoping that the heavens will rain down a real and lasting solution to all our economic woes?  At this point, it remains to be anyone’s guess.

Obama Bailouts: Inconvenient Truth

We must all now come into terms with one of the biggest inconvenient truth of this decade. The Obama Bailout plans might not work. Though the Obama bailouts do seem like the only sensible move the government at the moment, it may not be so effective. Another most inconvenient truth we have to face right now is this: the last few decades of American wealth was not real.

For those of you who want to understand this situation much more clearly, imagine that debt is a vacuum or a bubble of air in the economic system. This is the perfect metaphor for debt. Debt is actually imaginary income. It is money you spend that is not yet there. Now, imagine that the economy is full of these bubbles. Soon, these bubbles accumulated into one great big bad debt that was near bursting.

Last year, the bubble burst. Suddenly, the market realized that it was supporting all this bad debt out of thin air. It first manifested in real estate where the biggest loan bubbles where being created. Both the banks and the real estate industry colluded to convince people to invest in houses. They kept building houses to sell to these people, convincing them that they could have those houses rented out to pay the mortgage. But then the value of the homes started dropping and that’s when everything started to get messy. The domino effect of these bad debt bubble burst was a recession so bad that no one could have possibly predicted just how bad it would turn out.

The problem is too big now; no amount of money could possibly plug up that big hole that was exposed once the debt crisis blew open. The administration is allotting billions of dollars into the Obama bailout plans, but it is definitely not enough to plug a hole worth trillions of dollars.

California Homes

Obama bailouts should help to slow down the process. But for how long? Right now, analysts are afraid of another market crash caused by the bubble of accumulated credit card debt that is approaching the trillion dollar mark.

There is however, a ray of sunshine in all these foreboding forecast. Tuesday last week, President Obama accepted the loan payments from banks who were recipients of the Obama bailout plans. All in all, the repayment amount was more than sixty seven billion dollars. This was considered by all as a good omen. If anything, it proves that the banks that were once in danger was able to amass enough profit to pay back that sum.

However the president himself cautions everyone who might think that this is a sign that the economic problem is solved. Although this news is positive, the government further cautions that the market problems are far from over which lead to a dangerous worry free can posture that could exacerbate the problem.

Hopefully, these painful times we are experiencing right now are merely labor pains for the birth of a new, better economic system and spending attitude. The new economy should no longer rely heavily on the illusory wealth created by loans. If these hard times can teach us the great lessons we need to have learned a long time ago, then a great thing would be gained from this big mess.

Sidebar3 : Please add some widgets here.