Buffet's comment on bailout and US economy
Earlier today, Buffett criticized Congress for not acting sooner on a financial rescue plan:
"You've had an economy that's like a great athlete that's had a heart attack, cardiac arrest, and the paramedics that have come, (and are) arguing (about) who was at fault, the athlete should have been checking his blood pressure more carefully. The important thing is to apply the resuscitator. It doesn't help spending time worrying about who is to blame for the patient having the heart attack."Buffett told us he still thinks Congress will "do the right thing" but will "feel better after the votes have been counted." He warned that there will be "terrible, terrible" problems if Congress doesn't take action, sooner rather than later.
Here is a complete transcript of tonight's Warren Buffett interview with Charlie Rose, airing on PBS. It was provided to CNBC by the program.
Charlie Rose: 
We are in San Diego,  California this afternoon for a conversation with Warren Buffett.  He is a man  congressional leaders, the administration, and the Federal Reserve want to talk  and talk to.  He is the legendary chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway.  Its  success has made him the world's richest man.  He's admired for his investment  results over a long period of time.  He is trusted for his common sense and the  fact that he's warned over the years, in his annual letter to stockholders,  about some of the things that are contributing to the crisis facing America and  the global economy.  For all those reasons, we have come to see him in San Diego  where he is attending the Fortune Magazine's most powerful women's  summit.  Later, he will be interviewed at a conference by the Fortune reporter  and long time friend, Carol Loomis.  We come this evening from the studios of  our public television affiliate in San Diego, KPBS.  I thank my friend, Warren  Buffet, for taking time in a busy schedule to talk to us.
Warren Buffett: 
My pleasure,  Charlie.
Charlie Rose: 
Let me talk of the  news of today.  You have announced an investment of $3 billion in General  Electric, along the same terms as the the Goldman Sachs --
Warren Buffett: 
Yeah, almost  identical.
Charlie Rose: 
Why GE?
Warren Buffett: 
Well, I got a call  this morning from a friend of mine at Goldman Sachs saying they might be  interested in such an investment.  I'm familiar with the company.  I've known  the management, the current management, Jack Welch before Jeff Immelt.  I've  known him for decades.  And so I understand their businesses.  We do lot of  business with him, and GE has been -- I think it's the longest running stock in  the Dow Jones industrial average.  It will be 100 years now it will be around.   I hope I'm around then, too.  And it was an attractive investment.  And we have  had a lot of money around, over the last two years, and we're seeing things that  are attractive now.
Charlie Rose: 
Are you looking at  other things?
Warren Buffett: 
I look at  everything, Charlie.  That's my job.  I really do.  I mean every day, I think  about everything, yeah.
Charlie Rose: 
I know, but cash is  said to be king now.  Are you sitting on a lot of cash so that this is the time  for Berkshire Hathaway and Warren Buffet to look carefully at a lot of  opportunities.
Warren Buffett: 
Yeah, we want to  use cash.  The reason we haven't used our cash two years ago, we just didn't  find things that were that attractive.  But when people talk about cash being  king, it's not king if it just sits there and never does anything.  There are  times when cash buys more than other times, and this is one of the other times  when it buys a fair amount more, so we use it.
Charlie Rose: 
There is a time to  accumulate and a time to spend.
Warren Buffett: 
Absolutely.  You  want to be greedy when others are fearful.  You want to be fearful when others  are greedy.  It's that simple.
Charlie Rose: 
What are they  now?
Warren Buffett: 
They're pretty  fearful.  In fact, in my adult lifetime, I don't think I've ever seen people as  fearful economically as they are right now.
Charlie Rose: 
Why is that, do you  think?
Warren Buffett: 
Well, it's because  they -- they have seen the credit market seize up.  They're worried about money  market funds, although the latest proposition from government should take care  of that.  They've seen eight percent of the bank deposits in the United States  get moved very skillfully, I might say, within the last couple of weeks from  institutions that they thought were fine a few months ago to other institutions.  They are not wrong to be worried.
Charlie Rose: 
Is it being felt as  people often point out on Main Street?
Warren Buffett: 
Well, I've read  about all the sales today.  If you're an auto dealer, you're feeling it.  If  you're a furniture retailer like we are, you're feeling it.  If you're a jewelry  retailer, you're feeling it.  I know some of these businesses because we're in  them.  Yeah, it's being felt, but it will be felt big time more if we don't do  something about it, what's going on.
Charlie Rose: 
The Senate will vote  sometime this evening.
Warren Buffett: 
Right.
Charlie Rose: 
Are you satisfied  with that rescue plan?
Warren Buffett:
Well, I don't think  it's perfect, but I don't know that I could draw one that's perfect.  But I'd  rather by approximately right than precisely wrong, and it would be precisely  wrong to turn it down.  We need -- we have a terrific economy -- it's like a  great athlete that's had a cardiac arrest.  It's flat on the floor, and the  paramedics have arrived.  And they shouldn't argue about whether they put the  resuscitation equipment a quarter of an inch this way or a quarter of an inch  this way, or they shouldn't start criticizing the patient, because he didn't  have a blood pressure test or something like that.  They should do what's needed  right now.  And I think they will.  I think the Congress will do the right  thing.  I think that they've -- you know, they got into certain arguments and  they start worrying about assessing blame, and there is a little demagoguery,  but in the end, something this important, they'll do the right thing.  So this  really is an economic Pearl Harbor.  That sounds melodramatic, but I've never  used that phrase before.  And this really is one.
Charlie Rose:
Go through why that is  true beyond the fact that there is a freeze on credit, beyond the fact that  nobody is making loans, beyond the fact that banks don't lend to backs beyond  the fact that treasury bills are at a low.
Warren Buffett: 
Yeah.  When 40  billion of treasury bills are sold like they were last week, seven day treasury  bills, at a yield of 1/20th of one percent, that means the whole country is  basically at the point virtually, or a lot of the country is at the point of  putting the money under the mattress.  One twentieth of one percent away from  where it's betting to put it under the mattress.  You don't want 300 million  Americans putting their money under the mattress.  This economy doesn't work  well without the lubrication of credit and trust.  And that's been lost.  It's a  huge problem.  What you have is you have the major institutions of the world all  wanting to deleverage.  They want to take down their assets and liabilities.   What seemed so easy to borrow against a year ago now looks like rat poison to  them.  So they're trying to deleverage.  There is only one institution in the  world that can leverage up in a way that's all a countervailing force to that,  and that's the United States Treasury.
Charlie Rose: 
Are you approving of  what has been taking place along the stages that got us to where we are now,  whether it's Bear Stearns or Lehman Brothers or AIG, Freddie Mac and Fannie, or  what you've done with Goldman Sachs and the rest?
Warren Buffett: 
Yeah, I think  basically the right things have been done.  But no one saw the tsunami coming  fully.  And so when Bear Stearns came along, it looked like if you stopped the  flood at that point, you didn't have to worry about being downstream from it.   And I think the Fed did the right thing there.  And I really thought that would  probably halt runs on other major institutions, but it didn't.  We have seen  wave after wave.  And admittedly, there's been somewhat of an ad hoc response.   I'd rather have an ad hoc response than no response at all.  And I don't think  -- I don't think the treasury could remotely have gone to Congress three or four  months ago and laid out that scenario of what's happened and been credible and  gotten the necessary tools.  I think it took a crisis like this --
Charlie Rose:
And asking for the  power he is asking for and the level that he was asking for.
Warren Buffett:
No, they wouldn't  have gotten it.  So I think it's been, you know, kind of like a tragic play to  this point.  But at this point, I think it's clear, and will be clear to the  majority of the Congress.  I think it's clear to the American people that there  is only one countervailing force to a world where financial institutions are  trying to sell instruments every day and where credit has dried up, and that's  the United States Treasury.
Charlie Rose:
But at the same time,  there has been, and Congressmen and women will tell you this, a resistance  across the country because they think, as you well know, it's a bailout of Wall  Street and that they are sitting there in their own economic life, and nobody's  coming along to say, We're here to help you.  We're from the  government.
Warren Buffett:
Well, the patient  that's on the floor with the cardiac arrest is not Wall Street.  It's the  American economy.  I mean, that's --
Charlie Rose:
Do you think they  understand that yet?  Because that's --
[talking simultaneously]
Charlie Rose:
--  communication.
Warren Buffett:
Yeah.  I think they  probably don't.  And I think any time you couple the term "Wall Street" with  "bailout" or something like that, you know -- I don't like what's going on in  Wall Street.  I don't like what's going on with the executive compensation.  You  know, but I don't want to give a lecture to this body that's out there.  You  know, I mean, having had the heart attack, I want to get it back functioning.   And as a practical matter, I mean if you were Bear Stearns, and you were a  shareholder, you know, you lost 90 to 95 percent of your money.  A good many  lost their jobs.  They lost very cushy lives, many of them.
Charlie Rose:
Right.
Warren Buffett:
If you were at  Lehman, the same thing happened.  If you were at AIG, the shareholders are  getting creamed on these things.  And those shareholders are not just a bunch of  big shots in Wall Street.  Those are pension funds, and those are investors all  over the country.  I wouldn't worry too much about that.  Justice won't be  perfect on it.  I mean, you may be very mad at some guy that walked away with a  huge golden parachute, but that really isn't the important thing.  I mean, if  Pearl Harbor came along, you could have said the planning was wrong by the  military ahead of time or maybe the battleships shouldn't have all been in the  harbor and all that kind of thing.
Charlie Rose:
Right.
Warren Buffett:
It doesn't make any  difference.
Charlie Rose:
It's Pearl Harbor.   [unintelligible]
Warren Buffett:
I mean, the job is  Pearl Harbor.  And you better not spends weeks and weeks and weeks trying to  assign blame or deciding on a complete plan for fighting the whole war, you  know, and letting a committee decide where the battleships should go and all of  that.  You better spring into action with the best people you have.
Charlie Rose:
You have never seen  anything like this in your life.
Warren Buffett:
No, I  haven't.
Charlie Rose:
There are those who  argue that we are headed for a recession, you know?  And they look at depression  as the great fear.
Warren Buffett:
Sure.
Charlie Rose:
Is that a possibility  if this plan doesn't work?
Warren Buffett:
Yeah, it's a  possibility, yeah.  We have about 6.1 percent unemployment now.  I mean, we've  been in a recession, by any common sense definition, because if you look at the  American public, they've got 20 billion -- 20 trillion, I should say, worth of  residential homes.  They've got 20 trillion worth of stocks, very roughly.   Those are the two big assets of American families.  They are both down  dramatically for different families.  But 95 percent of the people at least are  worse off in terms of their residential wealth plus stock wealth from a year ago  or two years ago.  That is bleeding into the real economy.  I mean, that's  bleeding into auto sales and jewelry sales and furniture sales and all that.   But that wave is just starting to hit.  And if the paralysis we have in the  credit markets, if every company continues to feel all we want to do is get our  balance sheet down, sell assets, you know, it's just the start of what can  happen.  Unemployment's going to go up under any circumstances.  I mean, it's  the 6.1 is going to go higher.  But whether it goes and quits at 7 or whether it  quits as 10 or 11 or 12 depends on, among other things, the wisdom of Congress,  and then the wisdom of, in terms of carrying out the plan that Congress  authorizes.
Charlie Rose:
Would you say that this  plan which you have argued very strongly the Senate ought to pass and the House  ought to pass is simply the plan that we have, and I don't have a better idea.   But it's essential for the confidence of the nation and the system?
Warren Buffett:
Yeah.  I just worry  about whether it's enough.  But I think it is --
Charlie Rose:
Enough  what?
Warren Buffett:
Every day that goes  by, I mean, if you don't react to Pearl Harbor for a week or two weeks or three  weeks, you're behind in the war that you otherwise would have fought.  But it's  very important that the determination of the US Congress to do what is is needed  be made evident this week and by the actions of most of the members.  I mean,  you're not going to get total assent.
Charlie Rose:
What makes you  confident that this plan will work?  I mean --
Warren Buffett:
Well, I think you've  got -- I don't think you can have a better secretary of the Treasury than Hank  Paulson, you know.  I mean, he is in there at the wrong time, probably shouldn’t  have taken the job.  He’s a friend of mine.  But he knows markets, he knows  corporations’ work, he knows money, and he’s got the interests of the country at  heart.  And so, you’ve got the right -- you’ve got a wonderful person with  Sheila Bair, most of the viewers have never heard of Sheila Bair. Sheila Bair,  in the last two weeks, has taken eight percent of the deposits in the United  States and seamlessly moved those over to sound institutions which in turn have  gotten more capital, ended up, it’s been a magnificent job.  Eight percent of  the deposits in the United States, 10s of millions of depositors.  And nobody’s  ever heard of her.  She’ll never get a golden parachute or any severance pay or  anything.  She’s done a great job.  We’ve got some great public servants.  We  have I think the right people in there to get the job done, and then they need  more tools.
Charlie Rose:
And those more tools might be in addition to what’s in this plan?
Warren Buffett:
Well, they need plenty of money and they really need plenty of flexibility to carry out this plan. They also need in my view to very much tie it to market prices. I have said, Charlie, that the 700 billion, if they buy mortgage-related securities or mortgages themselves at current market prices, they’re going to make money over time because the United States government has staying power and it has a low cost of borrowing. And if I could take one percent of that 700 billion pot and take the gain or loss from it and be their partner, and they would buy the stuff at market, I'd make a lot of money. It’s -- I mean you have hedge funds and people like that buying these assets to yield 15 or 20 percent, I mean, that’s the buyer for these people that are trying to unload them. The U.S. Treasury has got borrowing costs like nobody else has. They can borrow basically unlimited amounts. They can stay there for years and years. These assets will be worth more money over time. So when Merrill Lynch sells a bunch of mortgage-related assets at 22 cents on the dollar like they did a month or so ago, the buyer goes -- is going to make money, and he’s going to make a lot more money if it happens to be an institution like the U.S. government which has very, very cheap borrowing costs.
Charlie Rose:
So you are saying to those taxpayers who are worried about what’s going to happen to the $700 billion, chances are good that when these securities are purchased and sold, you’ll get a lot of your money back.
Warren Buffett:
I think [inaudible].
Charlie Rose:
Or all of your money back, and maybe something else [spelled phonetically].
Warren Buffett:
I would bet on it. I mean, if I got a chance to take one percent of the deal either way, I would make that bet. When Berkshire Hathaway laid out three billion dollars for GE today, we didn’t spend it, we invested it. When the Federal government buys the mortgages, they’re not spending it, they’re investing it. Now, they’re investing it in distress type assets but they’re buying them at distress prices if they buy them at market. It’s the kind of stuff I love to do. I just don’t have 700 million. Maybe we could go in it together.
[laughter]
You know, with your money and my brains, I mean, there’s no telling how far we’d go.
Charlie Rose:
Whatever, I’ll take the deal, whatever you want to do. There is this, though, I mean, in terms of alternatives, some people have suggested for example that why don’t we -- why isn’t America doing what Berkshire Hathaway is doing? Why isn’t that a better deal for America?
Warren Buffett:
I don’t think it would be crazy to have a model or an entity model on the Reconstruction Finance Corp. That goes back to 1932, although it was really implemented in ’33 under Jesse Jones, and it invested in mostly banks initially and preferred stock and that sort of thing. So there are two things needed in the system, the one that’s needed overwhelmingly is liquidity. I mean, when people are trying to [unintelligible], there has to be somebody there to buy. And they don’t have to buy at a fancy prices, but to buy. And then there’s also a capital problem with some of the institutions. We have provided capital here with a couple of institutions recently. The Federal government did that in the ‘30s for the RFC and I think there could well be a proper role for government in that.
Charlie Rose:
Would that have been a better idea today?
Warren Buffett:
It wouldn’t have been big enough today. And it wouldn’t have been -- you couldn’t have -- if you’d set up at RFC today and you gave them $100 billion invested in the [spelled phonetically] capital, there’d be a very cumbersome type of application process and everything, these assets are getting shoved out day by day, and loans are coming to a commercial papers not being renewed. I mean, the commercial paper market, when that dries up, you know, that’s just like sucking the blood out of the economic body of the United States. And that’s happening. So I would say that an RFC-like thing might make sense. I probably would do it myself. But I don’t think trying to combine that with what’s going through now, I think what is needed now is liquidity.
Charlie Rose:
All right.  There are those who -- you just said you  would do it yourself -- there are those who believe and it has been suggested,  you know, that this is the time for Warren Buffett to answer the call of his  government in a country that’s been very good to him. I mean what are you  prepared to do yourself beyond run Berkshire Hathaway well is this.
Warren Buffett: 
That's my job.  But  any time I can be of help to the government in terms of giving advice -- I've  given a little advice, actually.  [talking simultaneously] anyway, no.  I  obviously am willing to do that.  I'm here tonight talking about this for that  reason.  It isn't going to do anything for Berkshire Hathaway.  Well, that isn't  really true.  I mean anything that enables this economy to run in the manner  that it should -- I mean we've got the same clients out there we had two years  ago.  We have the houses, we've got people -- more productive than they've ever  been in the history of this country.  We've got a wonderful economic formula in  this country, but right now, it is being -- it's been brought to a halt by some  events --
Charlie Rose: 
By?
Warren Buffett: 
Well, it's the  deleveraging that's going on right now that has caused the credit  crisis.
Charlie Rose: 
I mentioned earlier  in this introduction do you, if you read your letters to your stockholders which  you write, and Carol Loomis edits every year, and you think of your sister as  the person [talking simultaneously]
Warren Buffett: 
Two sisters,  yeah.
Charlie Rose: 
You have talked about  derivatives.  Derivatives are, in part, at the core of this problem,  yes?
Warren Buffett: 
AIG would be doing  fine today.  It was one of the ten largest companies in the United States in  terms of market value, over 200 billion, the most respected insurer and  everything in the world.  If they never heard of the word derivatives, they'd be  doing fine.  They'd be going to work in the morning and they would have no  troubles.  But they -- they -- it was very easy to do, because it's very  tempting to write numbers on little pieces of paper and you can report the  profit you want to, and there is no limit on it.  I mean there is no capital  requirements to it or anything of the sort.  And basically, I said there were  possibly financial weapons of mass destruction, and they had them.  They  destroyed AIG.  They certainly contributed to the destruction of Bear Sterns and  Lehman.  Although Lehman had other problems, too.
Charlie Rose: 
I'm interested in  this because people are asking, did people get away with murder here?  Were  there people who simply gained the system and took advantage and made huge  amounts of profit, and we had accesses that inevitably led to where we are  today?
Warren Buffett: 
Well, we had all of  that.  But I would say the biggest single cause was we had an incredible  residential real estate bubble.  I mean you can go back to tulip bulbs in  Holland 400 years ago.  The human beings going through combinations of fear and  greed and all of that sort of thing, their behavior can lead to bubbles.  And it  may have had and Internet bubble at one time, you've had a farm bubble, farmland  bubble in the Midwest which resulted in all kinds of tragedy in the early '80s.   But 300 million Americans, their lending institutions, their government, their  media, all believed that house prices were going to go up consistently.  And  that got billed into a $20 trillion residential home market.  Lending was done  based on it, and everybody did a lot of foolish things.  And people really  behaved in a fraudulent way or something, we'll go back and find the culprits  later on.  But that really isn't the problem we have.  I mean that's where it  came from, though.  We leveraged up and if you have a 20 percent fall in value  of a $20 trillion asset, that's $4 trillion.  And when $4 trillion lands --  losses land in the wrong part of this economy, it can gum up the whole  place.
Charlie Rose: 
And it continues with  respect to the housing market.
Warren Buffett: 
It  continues.
Charlie Rose: 
And some will argue  that we have to do something about that in terms of a long-term recovery of the  American economy.
Warren Buffett: 
Well, there is no  question we have an access stock.  The good thing is, we have household  formation in this country.  We have a country where I don't know whether it's a  million households a year or more, but good form.  So we can eat off an  [unintelligible], but too big, and house prices just soared beyond -- beyond  reason in many places and they got financed in silly ways, and people lied about  loans, all kinds of accesses entered into it.  But that is what -- that is the  single biggest cause of why we're here.
Charlie Rose: 
And should wise  people have known better?
Warren Buffett: 
People should  always know better.
Charlie Rose: 
Yeah.
Warren Buffett: 
I mean people --  people don't get -- they don't get smarter about things that get as basic as  greed and you can't stand to see your neighbor getting rich.  You know you're  smarter than he is, and he's doing these things, you know, and he's getting  rich, and your spouse is getting unhappy with you because you aren't doing --  pretty soon you start doing it.  And so you get what I call the natural  progression, the three Is.  The innovators, the imitators, and the idiots.  And  that's what happens.  Everybody just kind of goes along.  And you look kind of  silly if you disagree.  I mean, you know, you could have these crazy Internet  valuations in the late 1990s, but they prove themselves out in the market.  The  next day they were selling for more than they were the day before, and people  said, you know, you're crazy if you don't get in on this.  So it's very human.   Now, with housing it's something even more dramatic than that, because most  people aspire to own their own home.  And if you really think that houses prices  are going to go up next year and the year after, you feel if I don't buy it this  year, I'm going to have to buy it next year.  That's not true of an Internet  stock.  But it's true of a home.  And when somebody makes it very easy for you  to do it by saying you don't really have to put up my money, you can lie about  your income a little, or we'll give you 100 percent mortgage, you're going to do  it, because everybody that's done it has been proven right.  You have what they  call social tools, and, you know, you're going to feel like an idiot if you  didn't do it, because the house cost more.
Charlie  Rose: 
It's sound money.
Warren Buffett: 
It's sound money, sure.
Charlie Rose: 
And so when you look  at where we are going, there seems to be two issues that are apparent to me at  least, risk and leverage.  We just lost sight of risk and leverage of what was  appropriate?
Warren Buffett: 
Yeah.  Again, because  it pays off for a while.  You know, you can lose leverage, and it's the only way  a smart guy can go broke.  If you owe money, you can't pay them out.  You just  pay for everything, you do smart things, you eventually get very rich.  If you  do smart things and use leverage and do one wrong thing along the way, it could  wipe you out, because anything times zero is zero.  But it's reinforcing when  the people around you are doing it successfully, you're doing it successfully,  and it's a lot like Cinderella at the ball.  I mean you know at midnight  everything is going to turn to pumpkins and mice; right?  But if the evening  goes along, I mean, you know, the guys look better all the time, the music  sounds better, it's more and more fun, you think why the hell should I leave at  quarter of 12.  I'll leave at two minutes to 12.  But the trouble is, there are  no clocks on the wall.  And everybody thinks they're going to leave at two  minutes to 12.
Charlie Rose: 
And you're having a  good time.
Warren Buffett: 
Yeah, sure.
Charlie Rose:
So if this plan -- you  hope it will do what?  It will loosen credit.  It will stop the slide and the  panic.  People will have more confidence --
Warren Buffett:
Confidence is key.   Confidence is key.  You're not going to leave your money with me unless you're  confident I'm going to give it back to you.  And at this point, when treasury  bills, seven day treasury bills at 1/20th of one percent, it's not because  people want to earn 1/20th of one percent, it's because they trust the fact the  treasury will give it back to them next week.  And I'm sitting with six and a  half billion dollars we're going to use to close the Mars-Wrigley deal on  October 6.  I've got to hand over that six and a half billion on October 6.   Now, I have to be very careful about who I leave it in between now and then,  because they're expecting that he show up.  But I lose confidence in other  people, all kinds of institutions.  And there are plenty of them that I've lost  confidence in.  Then they get -- their funds aren't available.  They don't have  it for the next -- I mean the whole economy just comes to a grinding halt.   Competence in markets and in institutions, it's a lot like oxygen.  When you  have it, you don't even think about it.  Indispensable.  You can go years  without thinking about it.  When it's gone for five minutes, it's the only thing  you think about.  And the oxygen has been sucked out of the credit markets, and  confidence, and there has to be -- it'
And that's what this  --
Warren Buffett: 
That's what I hope gets  done.
Charlie Rose: 
And if it doesn't  work?
Warren Buffett:  
You turn the spigot.  But you  -- I've argued with the senators and congressmen I've talked to.  You don't want  to be too little too late.  They're being somewhat too late, in my view, and --  but that's okay.  We're going to argue for a few weeks after Pearl Harbor to  decide whether the Japanese attacked or whether we should actually commit a few  battle ships.  But the too little part, you know, it could be a mistake.  I mean  this has to be done on a --
Charlie Rose: 
Too  little meaning in terms of dramatic steps, or the amount of money you're  spending --
Warren Buffett: 
It's whether people  think it's too little, when you get all through with it.  I mean in the end, 700  billion is a lot of money.  And it will buy a lot of distressed property.  And  if you buy them at the right price, you may be buying two trillion of face  value.  The one thing you don't want to do -- [unintelligible] paid for it what  you're paying it from or what his carrying value is, you got to buy it at  market.  And one way to do that is if some institution wants to sell you a  billion dollars worth of mortgages, they might have to sell 100 million in the  market, and then you'll buy the other 900 million on the same terms.  Now, the  very fact that this has been authorized or will be authorized, I hope, will firm  up the market to some degree.  And that's fine.  But you don't want to have  artificial prices being paid.
Charlie Rose: 
What do  you believe might never be the same?
Warren Buffett: 
Oh, I think confidence will come back.  I will tell you this.  This country  is going -- be living better ten years from now than it is now.  It will be  living better in 20 years from now than ten years from now.  The ingredients  that made this country, you know, the miracle of the world -- I mean we had a  seven for one improvement in the average American standard of living in the 20th  century.  Now, we had the great depression, we had two world wars, we had the  flu epidemic.  You know, we had oil shock.  You know, we had all these terrible  things happen.  But something about the American system unleashed more and of a  potential to human beings over that hundred years so that we had a seven for one  improvement in -- there's never been any -- I mean, you have centuries where if  you've got a 1 percent improvement, then it's something.  So we've got a great  system.  And we've got more productive capacity now than we ever have.  The  American worker is more productive than he's ever been.  We've got more people  to do it.  We've got all the ingredients for a sensational future.  It's just  that right now the athlete's on the floor.  But we -- this is a super  athlete.
Charlie Rose:
And what's the impact  of the athlete being on the floor around the globe?
Warren  Buffett:
Plenty.  Plenty, and we're finding that out.  And the same  things happen to quite an extent around the globe.  I mean, the European banks  were doing what the American banks were.
Charlie  Rose:
And they're failing now, too.
Warren  Buffett:
Yeah.  I mean, they were getting the mortgage of some guy  in Omaha, you know, securitized a couple of times.  I mean he had all these --  they had all these types from Wall Street, you know, and they had advanced  degrees, and they look very alert, and they came with these -- they came with  these things that said gamma and alpha and sigma and all that.  And all I can  say is beware of geeks, you know, bearing formulas.  They've heard that in  Europe.
Charlie Rose:
Have we learned something about  decoupling or the American economy in terms of its impact, for example, China, a  place where you've had investments, and you know well.
Warren Buffett:
Yeah.  We just made a  new one a couple days ago.
Charlie Rose:
Where was  that?
Warren Buffett:
In a company called BYD, and they  develop a really good electric car, I hope.
Charlie  Rose:
Is there an operative narrative to the kinds of investments  you are making other than you look at and you buy on value, look at  advantagement [spelled phonetically] you look at a place that can absorbed the  amount of money you want to invest, and you look at its prospects, and you look  at price.
Warren Buffett:
Yeah.  They have to  be pretty good size for us now to have -- to move the needle.  But we look for  fairly large situations.  We look for things I can understand.  A lot of  businesses I don't understand.  So some guy may know how to make money in cocoa  beans, but I don't so I just let him have that.  But it's got to be something I  understand.  It's got to be a business with fundamentally good economics.  It's  got to be a management that I like and trust and admire.  And it's got to be a  price that makes sense.  And lately the price --
Charlie Rose:
Prices make  sense.
Warren Buffett:
Prices make a lot  more sense now, yeah.
Charlie Rose:
Now, is it  --
Warren Buffett:
And I'm not worried  they're all about the investments we make.  I mean, listen, this country --  we've got $46,000 or $47,000 of GDP per capita.  Now, we've done pretty darn  well.  We'll do better in the future.  I am not worried about the country.  I'm  just worried about anything that gums up the potential of the country.  And  right now, it's pretty gummed up.
Charlie Rose:
Okay.  But we do this  emergency, urgent rescue.
Warren Buffett:
Right.
Charlie Rose:
Come January, we have a  new president.  We have a new treasury secretary.
Warren Buffett:
Right.
Charlie Rose:
We have a new  legislature.  What's there in parity?  What will be the challenge for them  because they then can take a little bit of a longer term, look, maybe the  patient's getting up off the ground.  And but you want to get him or her moving  faster.
Warren Buffett:
Yeah.  Well, I think  it will get moving faster.  I mean once you get it off the -- once credit flows  -- now the recession is going to get worse.  I mean, I don't want to hold out  false hopes that the -- by some magic moment, that things will turn around in a  couple months because they wouldn't, Charlie.  I mean, and it's a big mistake to  try and mislead people.  They will turn around.  I don't know whether it will be  six months or whether it'll be two years.
Charlie Rose:
It's more likely two  years than six months.
Warren Buffett:
I don't know.  It  isn't going to be one month or to months, no matter what happens.  All I can  --
Charlie Rose:
Can you imagine six  months from now, it's beginning to turn around?  With the condition that you  know their --
Warren Buffett:
That's sort of the  best case, yeah.  That's sort of the best case.
Charlie Rose:
And the worst  case?
Warren Buffett:
Worst case is a long  time.  And I would say that if they --
Charlie Rose:
Worst case is five  years or --
Warren Buffett:
If we don't do the  things we should do, it could be five years, sure.
Charlie Rose:
Okay.  We should do,  though, beyond where we are now.  What are those things?
Warren Buffett:
Well, I would say  this, if it becomes evident that -- I understand the latest bill, they're  talking about 350 billion early and then going back.
Charlie Rose:
Right,  right.
Warren Buffett:
But we need to throw  the resources at this that are necessary.  But like I say, we are not spending  money.  I mean, if we buy these assets intelligently, the United States Treasury  will make money.  I mean, it's borrowing money.  It's just a few percent a  year.  And these assets are better than that.
Charlie Rose:
Okay.  But that's a  very big if.
Warren Buffett:
And it makes a  difference who the treasury secretary is.
Charlie Rose:
Okay.  So that's the  important question in terms of whether we buy these assets wisely.
Warren Buffett:
I would say it's more  important who the treasury secretary is than who the vice president is.  If you  want to have a debate here, I'd like a debate between potential treasury  secretaries than the vice presidential debate.
Charlie Rose:
Well, might it be a  good thing for the presidential candidates to tell it who it is they're going to  be listening to and who might be a potential treasury secretary?
Warren Buffett:
Well, presidential  candidates which I know listen to you.
Charlie Rose:
That's because they  tell you that, aren't they?
Warren Buffett:
Well, no, but I mean  it's not their job to know the candidacy of people.
Charlie Rose:
When all these people call you up, what are they asking you? I mean, you’re hearing from your friends and people at the Fed, you’ve been through this before too I mean you were that long term capital , a lot of other times you have had to face difficult crisis.
Warren Buffett:
I’ve seen a lot of things happen.
Charlie Rose:
So they come to you and they say “You’ve fought wars before, Warren, we’d like to talk to you.” But what’s the question they’re asking? What is it they want to know? And I’m talking about smart people who are charged with fixing it.
Warren Buffett:
Yeah. Well, lately they’ve been asking will this work.
Charlie Rose:
Right. Yeah.
Warren Buffett:
And you’re assuring them that if they do it --
Charlie Rose:
I will.
Warren Buffett:
-- if they do it, I -- I [talking simultaneously] Treasury Secretary [unintelligible] I would say this, I would -- they hate this term in Washington, obviously, but I would hand something pretty close to a blank check to a fellow like Hank Paulson to fight --
Charlie Rose:
Would you, really?
Warren Buffett:
Yeah. Well --
[talking simultaneously]
Charlie Rose:
A blank check, $700 billion, go spend it?
Warren Buffett:
Yeah, go invest it. Go invest it. And maybe put up a little of your own money up beside it, I mean, I might ask Hank to go invest with me.
[laughter]
Charlie Rose:
That’s right.
Warren Buffett:
But, no I think that trying to invest through 535 people is a tough job, you know, and so I would give more latitude. That isn’t going to happen and I -- you know, I [inaudible] --
Charlie Rose:
-- go with oversight? I mean, that’s what [inaudible], go with oversight.
Warren Buffett:
[inaudible], I think --
Charlie Rose:
But don’t try to make the decision --
[talking simultaneously]
Warren Buffett:
No, I think the oversight is great, and I think that oversight ought to be devoted almost entirely to the question is this being done at market you know. In other words, you want to make sure that the government isn’t investing foolishly. But you don’t want to care about which congressional districts it goes to or whether banks get favored over --
Charlie Rose:
But how do we determine whether it’s being done wisely?
Warren Buffett:
Well, I think --
Charlie Rose:
That’s a big question.
Warren Buffett:
Yeah, I think you’ll have plenty of scrutiny as how the money’s invested. I mean, just like the RFC. When the RFC operated, people knew which institutions they were buying preferred stock in. And it worked very well.
Charlie Rose:
But is this different from the Resolution Trust Company because they are talking about securities, not real estate?
Warren Buffett:
Yeah, well Resolution Trust Company was set up to liquidate a bunch of assets that the government had inherited because the savings and loans went broke. So the savings and loans went broke, the government stepped in, paid off depositors, and now they’re left with this mass of assets to sell. We’re not talking about selling here, we’re talking about buying intelligently. They were selling what they got handed to them by a bunch of savings and loan operators that had in many cases had done some very dumb thing. But their job was to liquidate it. And they liquidated. This is an entirely different proposition.
Charlie Rose:
You have said to me before that capitalism is not a perfect system. It may be better than all the other systems, but it’s not a perfect system. You talked about it in terms of some of its failings. People are looking at this now and saying, you know, excesses of capitalism, number one, markets that don’t work. And there’s some people in certain countries are pointing a finger at us and saying, “See, we told you, the markets will not always deliver for you.”
Warren Buffett:
Markets aren’t -- people do, as long as you have markets, you’ll have excesses. People went crazy with tulip bulbs. They went crazy with the South Sea Bubble, they went crazy internet stocks, they went crazy with the uranium stocks back when I was first getting started. I mean, you know, you’re not going to change the human animal. And the human animal really doesn’t get a lot smarter. Now, you can you know you can have institutions that put curbs on that in various ways, and actually what the banks, you know, they have various capital ratios and that sort of thing, but the banks got around them, I mean, they set up sieves and that sort of thing just to get more leverage. People love leverage when it’s working. I mean, it’s so easy to borrow money from a guy at X and put it out at X [inaudible].
[talking simultaneously]
Charlie Rose:
-- going up, you’re --
Warren Buffett:
Yeah, but you don’t get the X plus one back, if you still have the X on the other side you’re in trouble.
Charlie Rose:
There is this, too, accounting. You have strong feelings about accounting and mark [spelled phonetically] to market. Tell me where you are on that issue.
Warren Buffett:
A lot of people disagree with me on this, I believe in mark to market. I think that accounting in 1974 Charlie, it was either 1974 or ’75, we owned a bunch of common stocks at Berkshire Hathaway. I told our shareholders what the market was. And we used that. I said I think these things are worth a lot more than market. And I think we’re going to make a lot of money out of it. But this is what they’re worth today. And I don't think anybody gets hurt by telling the truth on that sort of thing. And I think that once you start saying we’re going to peg these things at some price that isn’t market, God knows what a financial [talking simultaneously].
Charlie Rose:
[inaudible] these people make that argue against you will say the assets are worth much more than mark to market says and therefore --
Warren Buffett:
They’re not worth it today.
Charlie Rose:
-- therefore we’re not seeing a reality.
Warren Buffett:
Well, but that is the reality. And that’s the reality of what they’re going to sell them to the Treasury for. You know, I --
Charlie Rose:
You get market.
Warren Buffett:
You get in a lot of trouble when you start putting fictitious numbers --
Charlie Rose:
On value.
Warren Buffett:
-- on value.  I mean, you can explain the fact that these  are depressed prices, you know.  We think these assets are going to be worth a  lot more.  And I think that case can be made in certain situations.  But I think  to just say, you know, we're going to say a dollar of cash is worth $2 all of a  sudden, it isn't worth $2.  It's worth a dollar today.  And I think once you  start putting phony figures into financial statements, you get in a lot of  trouble.  And we've seen so much of that in the last 20 years.
Charlie Rose: 
Is it getting  worse?
Warren Buffett: 
I don't think it's  getting worse.  I think people -- what people want to do is make it get worse.   [laughter]
Charlie Rose: 
But what would you  reform about that in terms of the way the accounting process -- you'd keep mark  to market?
Warren Buffett: 
The rule  [unintelligible].  I mean it's -- it's a nightmare to administer some of this  sort of thing, but I want to tell the shareholders of Berkshire, to the percent  we own marketable securities or things for which there are market, even if those  markets -- I want to tell them what it's all about.  As a matter of fact, I've  already written a section in the annual report for next year explaining why I  think in one case that the figures on our balance sheet as calculated are  wrong.  But it's the standard way of doing it.  It's holy writ.  The SEC wants  us to do it that way, and we'll do it that way, and I'll explain why I think  it's wrong and shareholders can read it and see whether they agree with my logic  or don't.
Charlie Rose: 
You -- when you look  at the prospects for this country, there are other people who argue, you know,  that America, as good as it is, lives in a world today and there are books being  written in which our supremacy, our primacy will now have to be shared.  That we  may still own as much of the pie as we had, but other people will own a lot  more.
Warren Buffett: 
That's great.  You  know, I want our -- I want our pie to grow all the people, but if some other  guy's pie is growing a little faster, that's terrific.  It will be good for us  in the long run, and I mean there are, you know, six and a half billion people  in this world.  And it's great for 300 million to keep enjoying more and more  property, but I think it's terrific if, you know, the remainder do.  And I think  if they can learn something from us in terms of our system, and I think they  have, they are learning more about how to unleash the potential of their  citizenry to turn out more goods and services that their citizens want or that  we want, I think that's terrific.  And that's -- you know, I think it's much  better to live in the world where those around you, particularly when some of  them have nuclear bombs, I think it's much better to live in a world where their  lives are getting better also.
Charlie Rose: 
Yeah.  But you mean  you look at that.  So when you look at China today, and you look at some Asian  countries and the amount of American debt they have, how much does that concern  you in today's economic circumstances?  And are they losing some of their  confidence in America?  And does that pose a huge problem for us?
Warren Buffett: 
Well, somebody's  buying these treasury bills at 1/20th of one percent.  I mean the -- we --  [talking simultaneously] consuming about $2 billion a day of goods and services  beyond what we're producing.  In other words, the rest of the world sends about  $2 billion a day net of something.  We got to send them something in return,  don't we.  So we send them little pieces of paper.  That would be nice if they  stuck them all under a mattress, but they got to buy something with them.   Sometimes they buy a treasury note, sometimes they set up sovereign wealth  funds.  They can do all kinds of things.  They can buy our companies here.  As  long as we consume more than we produce, and we trade away little pieces of the  country daily, they're going to own something.  Now, they can't run from  American assets.  I mean every day the rest of the world is going to have about  two billion more of American assets than we have, as long as they sell us these  goods.
Charlie Rose: 
Because we're  borrowing two million dollars --
Warren Buffett: 
Yeah, and they want  to sell us these goods.
Charlie Rose: 
But you don't believe  that's good.  I mean you believe that an increasing current accounts deficit is  bad.
Warren Buffett: 
I think it's  bad.
Charlie Rose: 
And it reflects  American's consumption ideas rather than its savings ideas.
Warren Buffett: 
Yeah.
Charlie Rose: 
But how does that  change?
Warren Buffett: 
Well, I laid out --  it's kind of a Rube Goldberg plan a few years ago, which I don't like myself,  except I like it better than the alternative, which is what we're doing.  But  we've actually been pretty good on exports.  I mean we are exporting 12% of our  GDP now roughly.  That was five percent many years ago, a much smaller GDP.  So  the rest of the world really likes our stuff pretty well.  It's just we buy so  damn much of what they produce.  And I think -- I think that should be something  addressed by -- I don't think it's the most pressing problem now at all.  We are  trading away a little bit of our country all the time for this access  consumption that we have over what we've produced.  That is not good.  I think  it's terrible over time.  But our country's productive grows enough so we  actually can do that, and we'll still be better off.  We just don't be as well  off as if we hadn't done it.
Charlie Rose: 
What's  all this going to do to the price of the dollar?
Warren  Buffett: 
It could be very tough on -- inflation could be a very --  is a likely consequence out of what's going on now.  Right now, we are in effect  making a -- to some extent, making a choice between future inflation and getting  our -- getting off the floor.  And we're likely -- we're likely to have more  inflation in the future as a consequence of the things we do to fight the  present situation.
Charlie Rose: 
Senator Obama, who  you support, I think, I don't want -- to be clear on this, but made an economic  speech today, talks about another stimulus program.  Is that essential at this  time?
Warren Buffett: 
I think the biggest  thing we need now is to unclog the credit markets, and we may need another  stimulus -- if we do, it's -- it should go to the lower and middle-income  people.  I mean the truth is, I've never had it so good in terms of taxes.  I am  paying the lowest tax rate that I've ever paid in my life.  Now, that's crazy.   And if you look at the Forbes 400, they are paying a lower rate, accounting  payroll taxes, than their secretary or -- whomever around their office.  On  average.  And so I think that actually people in my situation should be paying  more tax.  I think the rest of the country should be paying less, the 95 percent  that Obama talks about or maybe even a little higher than that.  But I think  that a stimulus plan should really be geared to the people.  You know, you've  got -- you've got, what, 24 million households, 1/5th of the households of the  United States, you have earning $21,000 a year or less, on average of close to  four people, three people in those households.  Two and a half they will  actually probably.  But just imagine living on 21,000 a year, Charlie, 22,000 a  year.  I mean you have 20 percent of the population doing that.  So you don't  have to worry about guys like me.  I would push purchasing power -- you push out  $1,000 of purchasing to those people, it's going to get -- it's going to get  spent.  And it needs to be spent.  They need it.  And it should come, to some  extent, from guys like me.
Charlie Rose: 
… what about the  capital gains tax?
Warren Buffett: 
Well, you know, the  capital gains tax is 15 percent now.  So I sit there in my office and I make a  lot of money by capital gains, and I pay 15 percent, and I pay no payroll tax on  it.
Charlie Rose: 
Right.
Warren Buffett: 
The woman that  comes in, takes the wastebasket away, she's paying 15.3 or whatever it is on  payroll tax alone.  I mean it is -- I never had it so good.
Charlie Rose: 
So therefore the  capital gains tax should be changed to 18, 25, 30?
Warren Buffett: 
I think it's  terrible for people in effect to say that income from investment should be taxed  at a much lower rate than income from labor.  I mean I just think that you're  going to -- we're going to spend 3.1 trillion, something like that, this year.   We're going to only raise about 2.6 trillion or something like -- you're going  to raise it from somebody.  You know.  Now, who you're going to get it from,  you're going to get it from me and you, or you're going to get it from, you  know, the people that drive the taxis, bring me here.  Whatever.  Maybe.  I mean  you got to get it from somebody.  And, you know, everybody is against paying  tax.  I feel the same, everybody feels that way.  But if you want a government  that's going to do the things we ask our government to do, you've got to get it  from somebody.  And over the years, the last -- particularly the last six or  eight years, they've taken less and less from a guy like me.  Now, you know,  everybody likes to talk about how the top one percent pays this percent in  income, but the income tax, we'll say 1.3 trillion.  The payroll taxes are over  900 billion.  That 900 billion, that doesn't come from me.  I pay it on the  first hundred thousand or something like that.  But that comes from the people  in my office.  And they are paying 900 billion -- nobody ever talked about that  when they talk about what the one percent is paying.  I love to tell how I'm  suffering because one percent we're paying 25 percent of the total.  We're not  paying 25 percent of the total taxes on individuals.  We're paying maybe 25  percent of the income tax, but the payroll tax is over a third of the receipts  of the federal government.  And they don't take that from me on capital gains.   They don't take that from me on dividends.  They take from the woman who comes  in and takes the wastebaskets out.
Charlie Rose: 
You mentioned  inflation.  The possibilities of inflation.  Are you therefore -- do you have a  position on what interest rates -- what the fed should do about interest  rates?
Warren Buffett: 
Well, I think  that's almost -- for the time being, just put that aside and we'll get to that  after the patient is up and walking.  It's interesting, though.  I mean we are  -- what's going to happen -- things we're doing are going to have some  inflationary consequences.  But, you see, interest rates, you know, very low  levels, including the long rates.
Charlie Rose: 
When we watch this, I  mean you and I are having this conversation today.  The senate votes tonight.   House may vote. People I talked to today believe it's going to pass.  Whatever  happened to change minds either in the combination of what they did with the  plan and tweaking the plan, or B, some people got so scared by the failure of  the vote last time that it brought home a danger of not doing  anything.
Warren Buffett:
Yeah.
Charlie Rose:
All right.  How will we  measure the progress, whether this is working or not?  What's the  indicia?
Warren Buffett:
Yeah.  It's going to  be tough because the economy is going to be getting worse for a while.  And it  might fall off a cliff if this doesn't pass.  But nobody will ever know that if  it does.  And so what they will not see immediate reaction.  I mean, we'll be  pounding on the guy's chest, you know, on the floor, and you know, he's not  going to just jump up all of a sudden.  So it makes it tough.  I mean, it's  tough to be in the legislature, you know, and vote for something and then people  say, well, you voted all this money and you know, it's all getting spent.  It  isn't getting spent.  It's getting invested.  But it's all getting spent.   Nothing's happening.  You know, how could you have done that?  You haven't done  anything for me.  I mean, you go through all of that.  And that's going to be  tough.  And it takes -- what it really takes is leadership that knows what it's  all about and can explain what it's all about.  And that people will believe  --
Charlie Rose:
But hasn't that been  missing, though --
Warren Buffett:
Sure.
Charlie Rose:
-- leadership that can  explain what it's all about?
Warren  Buffett:
Absolutely.
Charlie Rose:
And the reason you're  here and the reason I want to have a kind of fireside chat with you, it is that  somehow it hadn't gotten through, the idea --
Warren Buffett:
When the president of  the United States goes out at, you know, 8:00 o'clock in the morning and then  his own party votes gets him 2 to 1 in the house, you know that somehow a  message isn't getting out.  It takes real leadership.  I mean Roosevelt didn't  -- you know, when he came in, he didn't print any money.  Well, he actually may  have done [unintelligible], but he -- it wasn't like, you know, you've got the  greatest economics professor in the world or anything else.  But he did restore  confidence.  And they did a lot of thing.  And you needed it.  You needed to  jump-start the economy.  It took a long time.  I mean, the world did not change,  you know, in 1933 or '4.  But we put in things like the FDIC.  I think the FDIC  was one of the great inventions of the American [unintelligible].
Charlie Rose:
Well, they had to tweak  that in terms of his bill, did they not?
Warren Buffett:
Yeah.  They were --  and --
Charlie Rose:
[unintelligible]  extended five-year.
Warren Buffett:
They're going the  right direction, yeah.
Charlie Rose:
Roosevelt also said the  only thing we have to fear is fear itself, which is clearly the fear that exists  in the country.  Tell me when you worried the most of all the things that you  have seen over the last three weeks, say.  I mean how about in the last month,  when did you say, my God, I never knew it could get to this point?
Warren Buffett:
Well, I don't get  that afraid in a sense because I really do have faith in both -- I know the  country works extremely well.  You know, but when it isn't clogged up.  And I  know that Congress will do the right thing.  But I will tell you, when I watched  the House vote the other day, I wasn't afraid because I -- I still felt  something would pass.  But I -- we are going through a very, very tough period.   And, you know, I did not think I would see the day when, you know, an AIG would  not be able to have its checks clear.
Charlie Rose:
If AIG had failed,  would fold man sacks have been exposed and at risk, JP Morgan would have been  --
Warren Buffett:
Everybody would have  been exposed, Charlie.  Everybody.
Charlie Rose:
So why was there even a  question of not rescuing AIG at that time?
Warren Buffett:
Well, I think what  people understand there probably -- well, they were hoping the private sector  would do it.
Charlie Rose:
Right.
Warren Buffett:
I mean, that's the  same way I would behave.  If I were the treasury secretary or head of the Fed,  you know, I would try to scare the hell the out of the private sector and say,  you better save this because you're going down with the ship.  So you guys save  it.  And I went as long as I could worrying if they didn't save it, I'd come  in.
Charlie Rose:
Well, did that in fact  happen during this crisis in which the secretary of the treasury said you better  save this or we'll all going down?
Warren Buffett:
I think certainly  --
Charlie Rose:
You better put up some  cash right now.
Warren Buffett:
I think that they  hoped the private sector would come in.  And the private sector tried to come in  until they saw the size of the problem.  I mean, from were people on that  weekend that thought they'd had a solution.  And then the hole kept getting  bigger and bigger.  And all of a sudden became apparent that 20 billion wouldn't  do it and 30 billion wouldn't do it and 40 billion wouldn't do it.  So it got  beyond anybody's ability to certainly to do it in a short period of  time.
Charlie Rose:
There was not enough  capital available other than from the government.
Warren Buffett:
It's an unknown  situation.  You have the derivative book, [unintelligible] AIG financial  products, you know.  Nobody's every heard of it except it was a terrific profit  center.  You know, you could manufacturer earnings out of it, do all these  things.  And I will guarantee that you the top management -- and I'm not  knocking them for this.  I don't think I could have done it.  They couldn't get  their minds around it.  I bought a company called General Reinsurance in 1998  that had a similar but much smaller operation, had 23,000 contracts in  it.
Charlie Rose:
And you had to get rid  of it.
Warren Buffett:
I got to get out of  this.  It cost me 400-and-some million dollars in benign -- in a benign  situation.  But when this was not a benign situation.  If AIG had tried to  unwind their derivatives books.  I don't know.  It would have hit every  institution in the world.
Charlie Rose:
And there was no  private capital to come in and do that.
Warren Buffett:
Not big  enough.
Charlie Rose:
Not even Berkshire  Hathaway.
Warren Buffett:
No.  Not even  Berkshire Hathaway.  I mean, if I thought 5 or 10 billion would have bought me a  good deal, and I could have done that, I'd have done it.
Charlie Rose:
They were  --
Warren Buffett:
I'm not  bashful.
Charlie Rose:
[unintelligible] was  within reach.
Warren Buffett:
Yeah.
Charlie Rose:
But 85 billion might  not have been.
Warren Buffett:
No, no. And the Fed structured that thing very, very well. I mean, they have put themselves in a position --
Charlie Rose:
Yeah.
Warren Buffett:
-- where they are very likely to get their money back; maybe more. They participate 80 percent -- I mean, they drove tough terms. I mean I want to hire the guy that made that deal. He’d fit in well at Berkshire.
Charlie Rose:
A lot of people look at you and Goldman Sachs and GE saying I want to hire the guy that made that deal for you.
Warren Buffett:
No, Tim Geithner did a better job on this one.
[laughter]
Charlie Rose:
So we come down to the close of this conversation and you have been warning us about certain kinds of things. I hear from this conversation too this plan is essential now. Otherwise we’re in a very, very difficult place and each week we go beyond not doing something we get deeper and it becomes more irreversible.
Warren Buffett:
And, yeah, whoever said, you know, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure understated it and I you know a pound of cure that’s delayed another six months is going to need a ton of cure later on I mean it would be crazy not to do this. It will not produce dramatic results though in the economy. That’s what people have to understand. You’re going to see unemployment go up. You know, you’re going to see lousy earnings in many businesses. And they’re not --
Charlie Rose:
You’re going to see people unemployed.
Warren Buffett:
You’re going to see more people unemployed. But the difference Charlie if we bottom this thing out at seven percent unemployed versus nine percent, that’s three million people, that’s three million people that if we do it wrong you know lose their jobs unnecessarily in my view I mean you know I’ve never been unemployed. I’ve never been very fully employed either but just think of what it’s like, you know, to go home with a mortgage payment you know and kids and everything else. My dad had that happen to him in the early ‘30s. It you know you don’t want to create three million people more unnecessarily. But I don’t think you --
Charlie Rose:
That’s the depression --
[talking simultaneously]
Warren Buffett:
It really is. And you can’t help some increase from this point. I don’t want any viewer to go away think a magic wand exists in Congress. So they’re going to see some more bad news. But if we do this, we’re doing the right thing. And if -- the system will work over time. There’s no -- we got a wonderful system.
Charlie Rose:
Okay, but I mean let me come to that in the end. Do we need to do anything about the system? And beyond the emergency of the moment, the urgency of the moment, come January, about the system, lots of talk about regulation as you know and finding the right balance, lots of talk about whether government involvement is an idea we need more of rather than less of, rethinking sort of what President Reagan brought to fore.
Warren Buffett:
Once we get the [unintelligible] back, we can [unintelligible] changes [unintelligible], exercising [unintelligible], we can do all of that sort of thing. And you know if I got any good ideas out of that or I think they’re good ideas, I’ll be glad to contribute them but the system will probably overdo some other things. I mean, the nature of democracy is such that when there’s this -- there’ll be this revulsion, obviously, toward -- that’s never going to happen again, so we’ll probably attack it in various ways that don’t make sense. But I -- that’s what Congress is for. And that’s what advisors are for. And I’m all for getting the best minds you can get to work on that kind of thing. Like I say, I don’t think it’ll be done perfectly. Maybe we’ll end up with a little bit better system. But the end, we had a pretty good system over time. But when we went crazy, and we did go crazy on residential real estate, it set things in motion that just -- the dominoes started toppling.
Charlie Rose:
Thank you for coming.
Warren Buffett:
Thank you, Charlie.
Charlie Rose:
Pleasure to see you.
Warren Buffett:
Enjoyed it.
Charlie Rose:
Warren Buffett. We’re in San Diego. My thanks to the people at KPBS here. A conversation here about the crisis that we all face, and hearing from a man that a lot of people want to hear from. And I’m pleased that we were able to join with him here. Thank you for joining us. See you next time.
Current Berkshire stock prices:
Class A:
Class B:
Questions? Comments? Email me at buffettwatch@cnbc.com
URL: http://www.cnbc.com/id/26982338/
 
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