Struck by the near unanimity of the view that the Paulson
blueprint is beside the point--something that
Paul Krugman and the
Wall Street Journal, for heaven's sake, have been able to agree on--I attempt a limited defense in this
column for National Journal (the link expires in a week). The document is not a waste of time, and I do not see it as a cynical political maneuver. Most of what the Treasury proposes actually makes sense, and it would be good to see the plan acted on. The problem is that the blueprint fails to ask the most pressing and important questions. As I noted two posts ago, it is more about form than content.
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2008/04/national-journal-don-apos-t-trash-the-paulson-blueprint/8524/