WASHINGTON (AP) -- Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said Monday the American 
people can remain confident in the "soundness and resilience in the American 
financial system." 
Briefing reporters at the White House, Paulson said he "never once" considered 
it would be appropriate to put taxpayer money at risk to resolve the problems 
at Lehman Brothers. The nation's fourth largest investment bank filed for 
bankruptcy protection earlier Monday. 

Starting Friday, Paulson participated in three tense days of negotiations at 
the New York Federal Reserve Bank in which he held firm to the position that 
the federal government would not step in and supply any money to resolve the 
crisis at Lehman. 

Faced with the prospect of no government help in dealing with Lehman's huge 
losses on its mortgage holdings, other financial firms lost interest in trying 
to buy the venerable firm. That forced New York-based Lehman to file for 
bankruptcy protection, making it the largest bankruptcy in history in terms of 
assets, surpassing the failures at Worldcom and Enron earlier in the decade. 

Paulson explained his decision by telling White House reporters that any 
decision to put taxpayer money at risk to prop up a private company must be 
undertaken only after considering all alternatives. 

"Moral hazard is something I don't take lightly," Paulson said, referring to 
the belief that when the government steps in to rescue a private financial firm 
it encourages other firms to engage in risky behavior. 

"I never once considered that it was appropriate to put taxpayer money on the 
line in resolving Lehman Brothers," Paulson said. 

The current credit crisis will not be resolved until the prolonged slump in 
housing comes to an end, he said. 

"Until we stem the housing correction, until the biggest part of that is behind 
us and we have more stability in housing prices, we're going to continue to 
have turmoil in financial markets," Paulson said. 

Paulson, who was heavily involved in the decision last week for the government 
to take control of mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, said if 
that action works as expected in helping to stabilize the mortgage markets, 
then housing should start to rebound. 

"I'm not saying two or three months, but in months as opposed to ... years," he 
said. 



http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/080915/paulson_markets.html

Credit is a system whereby a person who can't pay gets another person who can't 
pay to guarantee that he can pay. 
 - Charles Dickens 


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