GMAC Bailout Could Cost Taxpayers $6.3 Billion, Says Watchdog
OPS_admin | Mar 11, 2010 | Comments 0
The Treasury Department sank billions into auto finance giant GMAC Inc. without an exit strategy or proof the company was viable – a decision that could cost taxpayers $6.3 billion, a new watchdog report says.
The government said the $17.2 billion bailout was a necessary step to save troubled automakers General Motors and Chrysler. GMAC provides critical financing to auto dealers, who borrow to finance their fleets until the cars can be sold to consumers.
Yet GMAC faced far fewer conditions than the bailed-out automakers, the report says. When the automakers were rescued, they were forced into bankruptcy. Shareholders lost their investments, creditors took a hit and executives were forced to detail plans for making the companies viable.
Full Story: GMAC Bailout Could Cost Taxpayers $6.3 Billion, Says Watchdog.
OPS: New Rule – The Sr Management and Board of Directors of any Corporations that requires a government bailout receives an automatic 10 year jail sentence (no parole, no pardons)
Filed Under: Economy - Labor


The modern conservative is engaged in one of man's oldest exercises in moral philosophy; that is, the search for a superior moral justification for selfishness. 





