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The administration plan does include a new way of winding down failed institutions. It will be modeled on the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.'s practice of taking over smaller, failed banks and selling off their assets. Under the proposal, financial companies that falter usually will be taken under the FDIC's wing while their business relationships are dissolved. That will help minimize the disruption caused by disorderly failures like Lehman's. The administration's plan would "protect the economy while imposing losses on shareholders and creditors of a troubled firm," said Treasury Department spokesman Andrew Williams. He said the proposal requires that any money spent on bailouts be recovered through fees levied on the financial industry. But there's no reason to think taxpayers won't be tapped to provide emergency financing for any bank whose failure could upend the financial system.
[Associated
Press;
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