The Bailout Isn't Being Policed Properly: Government Accountability Office

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MARTIN CRUTSINGER and ELLEN SIMON | December 3, 2008 05:35 PM EST | AP

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Chart shows productivity percent change from previous quarter at annual rate; 1 c x 3 3/4 in; 46.5 mm x 95.25 mm

WASHINGTON — The latest evidence of a deepening recession that's already the longest in a quarter-century came Wednesday in a pair of reports that found little relief in sight.

The U.S. service sector shrank far more than expected in November, as employment, new orders and prices plunged, hurting retailers, hotels and airlines. Meanwhile, Americans hunkered down heading into the holidays, forcing retailers to ring up fewer sales and factories to cut back on production.

The Institute for Supply Management's closely watched gauge of activity in service industries, where most Americans work, showed that for every company adding jobs, eight cut payrolls last month. That ratio led some economists to boost their forecasts for layoffs for November to levels not seen since the early 1980s.

"This is consistent with payrolls falling by about 500,000" for the month, said Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics in Valhalla, New York. "Let's hope it is very wrong."

Analysts expect the nation's jobless rate, when it is announced Friday, will hit 6.8 percent, on its way to a reading that they project could be closing in on 9 percent a year from now.

The view was equally gloomy in the Fed's beige book _ the latest snapshot of business activity compiled by the Fed from its 12 regional banks. It reported that "overall economic activity weakened across all Federal Reserve districts" since October.

The beige book reported that retailers were bracing for a weak holiday shopping season, manufacturing activity had slowed sharply and bank lending was contracting as the financial sector endures its worst crisis in seven decades.

On Wall Street, investors took the latest batch of grim data in stride. The Dow Jones industrials gained 172.60 points to close at 8,591.69.

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Many analysts expect the Fed, which cut interest rates by a full percentage point last month, to cut rates by a half-point at its policymakers' last meeting of the year on Dec. 16. In cutting rates, the Fed is trying to help stimulate lending and halt the economy's slide.

A panel for the National Bureau of Economic Research on Monday said the country has been stuck in a recession since last December. At 12 months, the current recession is already the longest since a severe 16-month slump in 1981-82. Many economists say this downturn will ultimately set a new record for the post-World War II period.

"I am looking for this recession to last 18 months, ending in June," said David Wyss, chief economist at Standard & Poor's in New York.

State Street Corp. on Wednesday said it will cut up to 1,800 jobs, or roughly 6 percent of its global work force, between now and the end of the first quarter of next year to reduce operating costs.

The Boston-based financial services company said it will reduce its staff mostly by consolidating middle and senior management ranks. Most of the cuts will be in North America, with the rest in Europe and the Asia-Pacific region. The moves will save $375 million to $400 million annually, State Street said.

The recession has hit retailers especially hard as consumers have cut spending. Stores had been frantically marking down holiday merchandise well before the traditional start of the shopping season, which began Friday.

Steep discounts may be one tactic that eventually pulls the country out of recession, said David Resler, chief economist at Nomura Securities, pointing to mortgage applications, which more than doubled last week as some mortgage rates fell.

"We saw what happens when people are given the opportunity to buy something on sale the day after Thanksgiving. People literally kill for lower prices," he said, referring to a Wal-Mart Stores Inc. employee who was trampled to death Friday in New York.

In a third report, the Labor Department said productivity, the amount of output per hour of work, rose at an annual rate of 1.3 percent in the July-September quarter. That was slightly higher than the 1.1 percent increase initially reported a month ago. And it was better than the 0.9 percent rise economists had expected.

Wage pressures, as measured by unit labor costs, rose at an annual rate of 2.8 percent. That was the biggest jump since a 4.5 percent rate in the fourth quarter of last year, but it fell below the 3.6 percent advance originally reported.

The Fed monitors productivity and wages to make sure inflation isn't getting out of hand. But analysts say worries about the deepening recession would now trump any inflation concerns in the minds of Fed policy-makers.

The ISM report said its services sector index fell to 37.3 in November from 44.4 in October. That was far below the reading of 42 analysts had expected. Of the 18 industries in the survey, including warehousing, real estate, restaurants and wholesale trade, only one _ health care and social assistance _ reported growth.

One reason labor costs have eased is that companies have been aggressively laying off workers as demand has fallen. Job losses through October this year have totaled 1.2 million. More than half that figure came since August as the economy's downward spiral accelerated.

Economists predict wages will remain depressed as job losses grow. Productivity growth will probably turn negative in the current quarter and the first three months of 2009 before beginning to rebound, said Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at IHS Global Insight. He forecast that productivity growth for all of next year will be a weak 0.9 percent.

Analysts had expected a big downward revision in productivity for the third quarter given that overall output, as measured by the gross domestic product, was revised to show a decline of 0.5 percent at an annual rate. That was a bigger drop than the 0.3 percent decrease originally reported. But the drop in output was outpaced by an even bigger decline in hours worked.

Also Wednesday, the Securities and Exchange Commission adopted new rules designed to stem conflicts of interest and provide more transparency for Wall Street's credit-rating agencies. Those agencies have been widely faulted for their role in the subprime mortgage troubles and ensuing credit crisis.

The three firms that dominate the $5 billion-a-year credit-rating industry _ Standard & Poor's, Moody's Investors Service and Fitch Ratings _ have been criticized for failing to identify risks in subprime mortgage investments, whose collapse helped set off the global financial crisis.

___

Associated Press Writers Jeannine Aversa and Marcy Gordon contributed to this report.

WASHINGTON — The latest evidence of a deepening recession that's already the longest in a quarter-century came Wednesday in a pair of reports that found little relief in sight. The U.S. service...
WASHINGTON — The latest evidence of a deepening recession that's already the longest in a quarter-century came Wednesday in a pair of reports that found little relief in sight. The U.S. service...
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so will this bankr upt the country and will the dollar cr ash.......­???

and then what happens?? and why is northco m gearing up for civil unre st??

anyone?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:17 PM on 12/03/2008
- MsDoc I'm a Fan of MsDoc 49 fans permalink

northco ??? what do you mean?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:24 PM on 12/03/2008
- 4peace I'm a Fan of 4peace 9 fans permalink

northco - northern command is military, we'll have 20,000 troops acting as policemen inside our borders.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:27 PM on 12/03/2008

North American Union and the Amero.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:25 PM on 12/03/2008
- myangeldog1 I'm a Fan of myangeldog1 102 fans permalink
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Your video is gone??

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 PM on 12/03/2008
- markinaz I'm a Fan of markinaz 4 fans permalink

Paulson & co. have absolutely no incentive to place those needed mechanisms in place. They got their money and now will just ride the wave for another 48 days until they are gone. No harm, no foul to them. They don't care. Let the next guys clean up the mess.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:17 PM on 12/03/2008
- liz I'm a Fan of liz 3 fans permalink

They will all be on their tropical islands with their billion dollar secret off-shore bank accounts. They are all Hannibal Lechters in spirit.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:32 PM on 12/03/2008

The Bush administration screwed something up? I am SHOCKED.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:17 PM on 12/03/2008

so will this bankrupt the country and will the dollar crash.....­..???

and then what happens?? and why is northcom gearing up for civil unrest??

anyone?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:17 PM on 12/03/2008
- spbm I'm a Fan of spbm permalink

so once again Nancy does nothing except blame the thieves she enabled for the past many years. "Oh I'm not implicit, see, I'm blowing the whistle"
impeach Nancy!
So weren't there provisions to rethink this package if the stipulations set into it were not followed?
Recind all monies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:17 PM on 12/03/2008
- FogBelter I'm a Fan of FogBelter 270 fans permalink
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I think the reason Paulson appears to be so spastic in his utilization of the $700 billion dollar bailout package is that, indeed, it was a bailout for Wall Street insiders and Administration friends, but they screwed up in their request and low balled the amount needed. So, Paulson has far more hands extended to him for the money then he has money to give. This $700 billion dollars is unlikely to make a dent in the current economic crisis, but the Bush Administration risks burning some powerful people and that is causing the tap dancing we are seeing from Paulson. Which bridge does the Administration wish to burn?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:16 PM on 12/03/2008
- liz I'm a Fan of liz 3 fans permalink

If only 70 of the executives who made more than 10 million in total compensation gave it back (which they can afford because it isnot the first year they made that much money) the "crisis" could be over.

Have any of them offered to concede one red cent? At least the auto execs were publically shamed into giving up salaries. Why not these money traders? At least the auto execs were running an enterprise that produced goods and services for the population (poorly indeed). Much of the financiaol sector was not tied to goods and/or services in any way. It was a game of hot potato with fake papers purporting to be the equivalent of money. And the endangered species, American middle class, gets stuck with the bill. These guys still squeal like the pigs they are if anyone mentions raising the taxes of the top five percent. Disgusting -- and our representatives do nothing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:40 PM on 12/03/2008
- FogBelter I'm a Fan of FogBelter 270 fans permalink
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In Class Warfare, which has been going on in the United States for hundreds of years, a healthy economy has acted as a buffer between competing class interests. But when the lean times come, the upper class Americans are put in a position where their self-serving extravagance is revealed and, ultimately, they are forced into making major concessions to the lower classes in order to preserve their way of life. This is why Theodore Roosevelt, a blue blood, pushed the Square Deal, and his cousin, Franklin, a blue blood, pushed the New Deal. We are faced with the same dynamic today, and my only fear is that since Obama isn't a blue blood he may have a harder time getting programs through simply because to the upper class Obama is not part of the family as the Roosevelts were.

The reality about our government representatives ... most are concubines who are kept by powerful benefactors, so even though they may talk a good game they know for whom they work when push comes to shove.

The bottom line is that the American Upper Class has to develop some common sense and start giving back, and this time they don't have the Roosevelts to reason with them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:17 PM on 12/03/2008

Surely we can not be shocked that a Paulson, a Wall Street insider, is not holding his old friends accountable when it comes to pay and bonuses. Of course, the Right will defend us paying these people hundreds of millions of dollars for a horrible job while denying a single mother assistance so she can go to school to make life better for herself and her child. These people really disgust me!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:16 PM on 12/03/2008
- abouttime I'm a Fan of abouttime 22 fans permalink

Anyone for privatization of American government now? Oh yes, they can do it cheaper. Right?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:16 PM on 12/03/2008

yes, the President (CEO) of the USA will only want 20 million a year in salary instead of that huge sum of 400,000 they get now.. Same with Senators and Congressmen.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:27 PM on 12/03/2008
- 4peace I'm a Fan of 4peace 9 fans permalink

they already make that much money, how many poor politicians do you know?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:30 PM on 12/03/2008

Accountability? What a concept. I couldn't find the word anywhere in my Republican lexicon.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:14 PM on 12/03/2008
- realpolitic I'm a Fan of realpolitic 149 fans permalink

As is typical of any plan developed by the Bush team, this one was done in an ad hoc manner and there is no follow-through. Bush does not have the patience or attention span to develop mechanisms to see that the goals of the bailout are being adhered to, such as public lending by banks. Without attention to these publc goals, this money is just a windfall to private financial firms. Republicans created this mess by insisting on free enterprise with no regulation and now they want no oversight of the bailout funds. Conservatives hate the very concept of government and they want to prove it at every turn.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:12 PM on 12/03/2008

Pelosi would make a lot of sense to me if:

A. Congress was ever accountable
B. Congress didn't write the bill
C. Congress didn't hand over the money

This is just more playing politics and trying to pass the responsibility . . . who gets screwed, taxpayers, again.

Pelosi should be ripped a new one for even barking up this tree.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:12 PM on 12/03/2008
- 4peace I'm a Fan of 4peace 9 fans permalink

Pelosi should be in prison with the rest of most of congress.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:31 PM on 12/03/2008

Tell Obama No To Chrysler Bailout - Owned by Steven Feinburg (earns 50million a year) a private company !

-Cerberus Capital Group owns Chrysler - bought in 2007
-Cerberus is a private investment firms
-Ceberus is owned primarily by Steve Feinberg
-Steve Feinburg earns $$$50 Million a year & lives in upper east side of Manhattan
-Steve Feinburg hired Robert Nardelli to run Chrysler
-Robert Nardelli was the guy who brought Home Depot to his knees before being kicked out by the board for company performance

**Chrysler wants 10 Billion of tax money to bailout a private company does this seem like a good investment???
----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­---
-Cerberus and Steve Feinburg made a bad investment with Chrysler. I don't think they are willing to share profits with taxpayers then why the hell should taxpayers bail out a private investment company! Car companies have rise and fallen throughout American history and your company should fail for its bad decisions .. others with better judgment will fill the void with new innovative vehicles.

If they get a bailout I want one too for my company. These are tough times for small businessmen!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:11 PM on 12/03/2008

More on Cerberus:

Financial Services - General Motors sold a 51% stake in its GMAC finance unit to an investor group led by Cerberus Capital Management in November 2006. GM expected to receive $14 billion over the next three years from the sale of General Motors Acceptance Corp. In December 2006, Cerberus acquired the Austrian bank BAWAG P.S.K. for a reported EUR3.2 billion. In August 2007, Cerberus announced that it was closing one of their mortgage companies, Aegis Mortgage.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cerberus_Capital_Management

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:15 PM on 12/03/2008
- flatus I'm a Fan of flatus 36 fans permalink
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Oh, yes. Another sweet taste of our "fiscally responsible" Republicans at work. Good job, Hank!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:11 PM on 12/03/2008

I would like to know what was in the letter that Paulson showed to the heads of these banks before he gave them the money! Did it say they were not answerable to Congress or the american people!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:10 PM on 12/03/2008

you got it

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:12 PM on 12/03/2008
- haramagoti I'm a Fan of haramagoti 12 fans permalink
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If there's no audit immediately of every cent, and if proven money was misspent, upon being demanded it be recycled within those corporations bailed out, and put towards the proper programs to help THE PUBLIC and not those already sinking rich from milking the system and mismanaging their companies into the ground ANYWAY, if they do not meet those demands, that is perfectly damning evidence that Capitol Hill just made a Hill of Capitol behind the scenes. Is this how Washington asks for a raise? Or is it just how they keep up with the war profiteers they work under? How did Citigroup just acquire a $10 billion company? How is it the news every other day is filled with tales of rampant abuse of the bailout? Who's getting the kickbacks for that? Looks like just about every damn one of them. To save face: Audit

Now we see it! Now we Won't!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:10 PM on 12/03/2008
- abouttime I'm a Fan of abouttime 22 fans permalink

Your'e darned right!
Accountabi­lity... NOW!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:12 PM on 12/03/2008
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