(submitted by an anonymous legalienate correspondent)
Helga
is the proprietor of a bar.
She realizes that virtually
all of her customers are
unemployed alcoholics and, as
such, can no longer afford to
patronize her bar. To solve
this problem she comes up with
a new marketing plan that
allows her customers to drink
now, but pay later.
Helga
keeps track of the drinks
consumed on a ledger, thereby
granting the customers'
loans.
Word
gets around about Helga's
"drink now, pay later"
marketing strategy and, as a
result, increasing numbers of
customers flood into Helga's
bar. Soon she has the largest
sales volume for any bar in
town.
By
providing her customers
freedom from immediate payment
demands Helga gets no
resistance when, at regular
intervals, she substantially
increases her prices for wine
and beer - the most consumed
beverages.
Consequently,
Helga's gross sales volumes
and paper profits increase
massively. A young and
dynamic vice-president at the
local bank recognizes that
these customer debts
constitute valuable future
assets and increases Helga's
borrowing limit. He sees no
reason for any undue concern,
since he has the debts of the
unemployed alcoholics as
collateral.
He
is rewarded with a six figure
bonus.
At
the bank's corporate
headquarters, expert traders
figure a way to make huge
commissions, and transform
these customer loans into
DRINKBONDS. These
"securities" are then bundled
and traded on international
securities markets.
Naive
investors don't really
understand that the securities
being sold to them as "AA
Secured Bonds" are really
debts of unemployed
alcoholics. Nevertheless, the
bond prices continuously climb
and the securities soon become
the hottest-selling items for
some of the nation's leading
brokerage houses.
The
traders all receive a six
figure bonus.
One
day, even though the bond
prices are still climbing, a
risk manager
at
the original local bank
decides that the time has come
to demand payment on the debts
incurred by the drinkers at
Helga's bar. He so informs
Helga. Helga then demands
payment from her alcoholic
patrons but, being unemployed
alcoholics, they cannot pay
back their drinking debts.
Since Helga cannot fulfill her
loan obligations she is forced
into bankruptcy. The bar
closes and Helga's 11
employees lose their jobs.
Overnight,
DRINKBOND prices drop by 90%.
The collapsed bond asset value
destroys the bank's liquidity
and prevents it from issuing
new loans, thus freezing
credit and economic activity
in the community.
The
suppliers of Helga's bar had
granted her generous payment
extensions and had invested
their firms' pension funds in
the BOND securities. They find
they are now faced with having
to write off her bad debt and
with losing over 90% of the
presumed value of the bonds.
Her wine supplier also claims
bankruptcy, closing the doors
on a family business that had
endured for three generations;
her beer supplier is taken
over by a competitor, who
immediately closes the local
plant and lays off 150
workers.
Fortunately
though, the bank, the
brokerage houses and their
respective executives are
saved and bailed out by a
multi-billion dollar
no-strings attached cash
infusion from the government.
They
all receive six a figure
bonus.
The
funds required for this
bailout are obtained by new
taxes levied on employed,
middle-class, non-drinkers
who've never been in Helga's
bar.
Now
do you understand?
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