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Watchdog: Bailout Helped, But Triggered Distrust

Contributor: Dana Smith
Email: dana.smith@wcpo.com
Last Update: 10/21 1:03 am
NEW YORK - OCTOBER 24: Protesters gather outside of the New York Stock Exchange October 24, 2008 in New York City. The demonstrators were frustrated with the goverment bailout package and voiced concerns about poor and working class Americans. It was another tumultuous week on Wall St. with the Dow finishing down over 300 points Friday. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
NEW YORK - OCTOBER 24: Protesters gather outside of the New York Stock Exchange October 24, 2008 in New York City. The demonstrators were frustrated with the goverment bailout package and voiced concerns about poor and working class Americans. It was another tumultuous week on Wall St. with the Dow finishing down over 300 points Friday. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON (AP) -- A government watchdog said the $700 billion bailout for the financial industry played a major role in rescuing the economy over the last year but also engendered anger and distrust among Americans because of secrecy and confusion about the way the program was handled.

The mixed and blunt assessment by Neil Barofsky, the special inspector general in charge of oversight for the bailout fund, comes just as the administration is taking steps to wind down and refocus the Wall Street rescue effort. Barofsky's conclusions are in a quarterly report scheduled for release Wednesday.

An administration official said Tuesday that the bailout effort's signature initiative -- a capital purchase program that aimed to inject $218 billion into banks -- would effectively wrap up at the end of the year.

But even as the administration aimed to refocus the massive Troubled Asset Relief Program on small businesses and homeowners, Barofsky said the effort to save the nation's financial sector came at great cost to taxpayers, to the integrity of the financial system and to the public's perception of the federal government.

Barofsky said public suspicion was fed by Treasury's decision not to require banks to report how they used their rescue money and its "less-than-accurate" statements describing the financial condition of nine large banks that benefited from large infusions of aid. The TARP program began under the administration of President George W. Bush and has expanded under President Barack Obama.

Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.



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