About Me

"Talk," she commanded, standing in front of me. "Who, what and why?" "I'm Percy Maguire," I said, as if this name, which I had thought up, explained everything. Dashiell Hammett, "The Big Knockover"

Thursday, March 26, 2009

The Patsy

About three-fourths through The Maltese Falcon, Humphrey Bogart's Sam Spade and Sydney Greenstreet's Kasper Gutman decide to join forces although each man was from different sides of the law. In fact, Spade suggests that Gutman's accomplice, Elisha Cook's Wilmer Cook take the rap on murdering Spade's partner to seal the deal -- to be the patsy. Gutman relents much to the displeasure of Cook. (Check the movie out to see how it ends.)

Such is the case with the U.S. Treasury. President Obama and Larry Summers, his director of the National Economic Council, are calling the shots on revitalizing (or destroying) the economy. Timmy Geithner is the patsy. They figured he probably had enough smarts and experience to get confirmed but enough weaknesses (to include an issue about not paying his taxes) to make him ineffective. (I don't know if Geithner saw it coming.)

So while O & S pump up big government with ever bigger steroids, er, spending, it's Geithner who is being set up for failure. He's the public face of the Administration on the economy and he's the one that has to play "stump the chump" with Congress, the media, and our allies. Obama isn't resigning and Summers isn't going anywhere -- so when a head has to roll -- it will be Geithner's.

Summers, who was a Treasury Secretary, doesn't want nor need too much attention in his current office. (I think his dull demeanor is an act when he hits the Sunday morning news programs.) As the economy continues to plunge south and as even more red ink will be spilled, it will be Geithner, not Summers, who will be called on to pay.

However, Timmy isn't going anywhere. As seen by the Administration's failure to fill the dozen and a half spots that require Senate ratification, it won't be easy getting another patsy. If Geithner couldn't bring himself to step down after it was made known that he studiously avoided paying taxes, it's not likely that he will resign willingly. He will have to be fired. So yesterday's screw up -- about being "open" to a worldwide currency other than the dollar -- will have little impact on Geithner's job security.

It didn't end well for Wilmer Cook in the movie. I'm sure it will be just as bad for Timmy (sans the bloodshed, of course).

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