Bloomberg.com reporters Mark Pittman and Bob Ivry are reporting a running total of the money the U.S. government has pledged and spent for bailouts and economic stimulus payments. The total disbursed through February 24, 2009 stands at $3.8 trillion; the total commitment is $11.6 trillion. The Federal Reserve is providing the largest share at $7.6 billion, followed by the U.S. Treasury $2.2 trillion and FDIC $1.6 trillion. The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and support for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, combined with purchases of student loans – bailout money that comes closest to directly bailing out Main Street – total only $760 billion – less than 7 percent of the total.
The national debt currently stands at $10.8 trillion — versus an authorized limit of $12.1 trillion.
Last week, U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner got into a tiff with the rest of the world (denied by President Obama) by telling them that they should spend at least 2 percent of their GDP on their own stimulus packages.
The U.S. commitment of $11.6 trillion equals 81 percent of U.S. 2008 gross domestic product (GDP). The $787 billion fiscal stimulus is 5.4 percent of GDP. Just the two-thirds of the stimulus that represents new spending (one-third is tax cuts) is 3.6 percent of GDP. Here’s what financial institutions in various countries got from U.S. taxpayers by way of the AIG bailout:
Country |
Bailout Benefit |
US |
$ 31.1 |
France |
$ 19.1 |
German |
$ 16.7 |
UK |
$ 12.8 |
Switzerland |
$ 5.4 |
Netherlands |
$ 2.3 |
Canada |
$ 1.1 |
Spain |
$ 0.3 |
Denmark |
$ 0.2 |
Italy |
$ 0.2 |
Serbia |
$ 0.2 |
Everybody knows that America
Everybody knows that America face huge economic crises in these and this 3.8 Trillion is only forward to rebuild the American economy. I think America should revisit its professіonal resume on resume servіce revіews at blogspot.com to prevent from more damage.