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In 2008, Congress and former President George W. Bush approved spending $700 billion to bail out financial institutions as the nation's financial system was on the brink of collapse. The Troubled Asset Relief Program was later expanded to include American automakers and homeowners, which would not be subject to the new bank tax. The TARP program plans to spend a total of $497 billion, according to a report released Tuesday by the program's inspector general. To date, firms have repaid $186 billion, with billions more expected to be repaid in the future, according to the report. Still, the program is projected to result in a loss to taxpayers of as much as $127 billion. "We need to think about how we are going to get that money back on behalf of American taxpayers," Baucus said. Obama's proposed 0.15 percent tax on the liabilities of large financial institutions would apply only to those companies with assets of more than $50 billion
-- a group estimated at about 50. Administration officials estimate that 60 percent of the revenue would come from the 10 biggest ones. A key liability for many banks is deposits, though they would be exempt from the tax. The other main liability is debt, which many banks used to finance risky investments, leading to the financial crisis. Obama has argued that a tax on non-deposit liabilities would be akin to a tax on risk, which would dissuade banks fom taking on too much risk.
Representatives of the financial services industry say talk of a new tax is premature because it is not yet known how much money will be repaid without one. "Taxpayers will make a profit on every bank TARP program," James Chessen, chief economist at the American Bankers Association, said in an interview.
[Associated
Press;
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