blackshoe, on 2014-January-16, 09:47, said:
Fair enough. I don't think you can count taxes collected post-bailout as "payback". That apparently leaves the stock and the "repayment of loans" you mentioned. Did the sum of those two things, for each bailout, cover all the costs of the bailout? If not, I don't think you can say that the government was "repaid" for doing it.
On the contrary, the primary purpose of the bailout is to preserve the companies in their present form (or some close approximation thereof). This preserves jobs, which, from the point of view of the government, both preserves the income and employment taxes that such jobs produce, and avoids having to pay unemployment benefits which would have been payable if those employed by the bailed out companies would have lost their jobs.
So, while the repayment of loans and the gains on the sale of the government's equity in the companies obtained in the bailouts are the most objectively measurable repayments, there are significant other benefits to the bailouts.
As for whether the repayment of loans and the gain on the sale of the equity interests paid the government in full for the bailouts, that is not the be all and the end all of the discussion. My understanding is that these repayments either made the government whole or went a long way towards reducing the out-of-pocket cost of the bailouts. But, as I mentioned, there are many other benefits of the bailouts which are much more difficult to quantify.
And this doesn't even touch upon the psychological benefits to the employees of these companies not to have to lose their jobs and reenter the workplace in some other position.
There have been a lot of articles written regarding the "true" cost of the bailout of AIG and other companies, both favorable and unfavorable to the government. But I have not seen any article that takes into account other aspects of the bailout, such as the preservation of jobs at the companies and the effect on the economy and the fisc resulting from it. This is an important aspect of the bailouts which is almost universally overlooked.