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“Not on My Watch”

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2013

Ronald S. Boster*
Affiliation:
Committee on the Budget, U.S. House of Representatives

Extract

To fill in the “black hole” between remaining S&L assets and what is owed to depositors will cost about $200 billion in 1991 dollars. By any measure, this is a lot of money and is in fact about equivalent to the undiscounted $500 billion figure ineptly professed by the General Accounting Office and widely echoed in media reports, political speeches, and on talk shows.

An important aspect of this cost is that it is history—gone for good. It will not come back as the result of an economic rebound, for instance. In fact, the longer it takes to pay off this bill, the higher it will go.

I speak with less conviction about such non-dollar costs of the S&L crisis as the loss of public confidence in public institutions and their officials. I do, however, believe they too are significant, and I do not agree with the cynics who argue that there was little or no confidence left to lose.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The American Political Science Association 1991

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References

Barth, James R. 1991. The Great Savings and Loan Debacle. Lanham, MD: The AIE Press, February 14.Google Scholar
Kane, Edward J. 1989. The S&L Insurance Mess: How Did It Happen? Washington: The Urban Institute Press.Google Scholar
Kane, Edward J. “The S&L Insurance Mess.” St. Louis: Washington University Center for the Study of American Business, Contemporary Issues Series 41.Google Scholar
Woodward, G. Thomas. 1990. “Origins and Development of the Savings and Loan Situation.” Washington: Congressional Research Service, 90522E (November 5).Google Scholar