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A Bail-Out is an external financial rescue that stabilizes distressed firms or economies to prevent systemic collapse.
A Bail-Out is a financial rescue where an external entity—typically a government, central bank, or consortium—injects funds into a failing company or industry to prevent collapse. Bailouts are often implemented to preserve systemic stability, protect jobs, and maintain market confidence.
A Bail-Out refers to the provision of capital support from outside sources to a financially distressed organization to restore solvency or liquidity. Unlike bail-ins, bailouts rely on public or external funding.
Bail-outs are used in crises when the failure of major institutions could trigger systemic collapse. Governments or central banks intervene by purchasing assets, guaranteeing loans, or directly injecting capital. The 2008 Financial Crisis popularized bail-outs as governments rescued major financial institutions to prevent contagion.
While bail-outs stabilize short-term markets, they raise long-term concerns over fairness and taxpayer burden. The distinction from bail-ins lies in funding origin—external vs. internal.
Fiscal Impact = Bailout Cost – (Recovered Assets + Future Revenue Gains)
This measures the net cost or gain of a bailout to the public treasury.
Bailouts safeguard the broader economy by preventing chain-reaction failures across industries. They maintain confidence in financial systems and protect critical infrastructure. Economically, they serve as counter-cyclical measures but must balance fiscal responsibility and moral hazard.
| Type | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Corporate Bail-Out | Rescue of private firms to protect jobs and output. | General Motors (2009) |
| Bank Bail-Out | Government injection to stabilize banks. | TARP, RBS support |
| Sovereign Bail-Out | International aid to nations in debt crises. | Greece (IMF/EU rescue) |
| Industry-Wide Bail-Out | Assistance across an entire sector. | COVID-19 airline support |
Governments, central banks, or international institutions fund them through loans, guarantees, or asset purchases.
They use taxpayer funds and may encourage risky corporate behavior.
A bailout uses external funding, while a bail-in restructures internal debt.