Wednesday, 15 October 2008


Total Bailout Cost Heads Towards $5 TRILLION
The total potential cost of the financial bailout to the U.S. taxpayer is already rapidly approaching $5 trillion, over seven times as much as the meaningless $700 billion bailout bill figure.

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Total Bailout Cost Heads Towards $5 TRILLION
Numbers becoming meaningless as Paulson defends government intervention 



Steve Watson
Infowars.net
Wednesd
ay, Oct 15, 2008



The total potential cost of the financial bailout to the U.S. taxpayer is already rapidly approaching $5 trillion, over seven times as much as the meaningless $700 billion bailout bill figure.

Analysts have previously marked out the $5 trillion figure as the actual cost, now those predictions are becoming demonstratively accurate.

Meanwhile, Hank Paulson hasdefended government intervention, stating "There's no doubt that the way to get the maximum bang for the taxpayers here was to invest in banks."

Based on this Reuters summary and the sources linked within the table, here is a breakdown of the bailout's cost to taxpayers so far.

Bailout Type
Cost To Taxpayers
$300 billion
$250billion
$25 billion
$150 billion
$700 billion+
$29 billion
$200 billion
$85 billion (+ extra request of $35 billion)
$300 billion
$4 billion
$87 billion
$200 billion+
$50 billion
$144 billion
POSSIBLE TOTAL$2.56 trillion+
NUMBER OF HOUSEHOLDS PER U.S. CENSUS105,480,101
POSSIBLE COST PER HOUSEHOLD
$24,269

In addition, the U.S. government has said it will temporarily guarantee $1.5 trillion (£856 billion) in new senior debt issued by banks, as well as insure $500 billion (£285 billion) in deposits in non-interest accounts, mainly used by businesses.

These figures take the potential cost to $4.559 trillion+ - or $43, 221 per household.

Furthermore, when you account for the fact that the credit default swap market is around $62 trillion, and that derivatives worldwide are worth between between $1 and $2 quadrillion, the numbers start to become meaningless.