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So far the blood on the streets is almost exclusively from the financial sector, ie. investment banks, hedge funds, etc. They may affect your pension funds but it's mainly institutional investors and others with big stakes in these companies that'll pick up the tab.

However AIG obviously isn't an investment bank. A failure of AIG would affect people outside of the financial sector who have purchased AIG insurance products (including me). The pragmatism of the fed bailout is to prevent the financial meltdown from spilling over into the real economy. Believe it or not, GDP growth in the US is surpassing projections (3.3% in 2Q 2008 ahead of a 1.9% estimate - see http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/08/28/business/usecon.4-326...). The real economy isn't doing that badly, and the pragmatic choice would be to protect that.



That isn't fully incorrect; individual insurance policy holders are not at (much) risk. Their policies are controlled by regulated subsidiaries in each of the several states. Even if the parent goes bankrupt the subsidiaries will continue to operate and pay claims. And even if one of those goes down, the policies are guaranteed by state-operated reinsurance funds. There are some dollar limits to the reinsurance coverage but they are generally pretty high.


I also have life insurance with AIG. How does it affect me?

I only have to cancel and buy it from another company. right?


the 3.3 - 1.9 = 1.4% difference is precisely reflected in the oil bubble. now that oil is backing down, this number will also fall


And you should look at GDP per person. The US population is still growing strong.




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