10-05-2008, 08:30 PM
The recent economic events that occurred in USA and spread over the Atlantic, are a big head ache for the brightest minds of our times. The world is witnessing hard times on financial markets all over the world, and governments seem to have a cure for all this mess.
As many of you know the USA congress approved the 700 Billion dollar bailout plan in a very short time to save and chill the tensions on the local markets, and saying that this was a necessary measure to help the economy.
In Europe, the ECB and representatives of other institutions will have a meeting on Thursday concerning the danger of a similar situation to develop in Europe. But, from the start no one is willing or is agree to pass a bailout plan as USA did.
So the question is what is good and what is wrong to do in such a situation. Shall we help the big guys and clean the markets from all of their mistakes or, shall we let them burn this time and learn an expensive lesson?
My point is that not all the big/small institutions that are facing problems should receive this help, as tax-payers money is not for saving someone else’s business.
As many of you know the USA congress approved the 700 Billion dollar bailout plan in a very short time to save and chill the tensions on the local markets, and saying that this was a necessary measure to help the economy.
In Europe, the ECB and representatives of other institutions will have a meeting on Thursday concerning the danger of a similar situation to develop in Europe. But, from the start no one is willing or is agree to pass a bailout plan as USA did.
So the question is what is good and what is wrong to do in such a situation. Shall we help the big guys and clean the markets from all of their mistakes or, shall we let them burn this time and learn an expensive lesson?
My point is that not all the big/small institutions that are facing problems should receive this help, as tax-payers money is not for saving someone else’s business.