15 Years Later, How Much Did The 2008 Financial Crisis Bailouts Actually Cost American Taxpayers?

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Back in 2008, there was no topic more polarizing than the Treasury Department's financial bailouts of then-failing American companies.

Supporters of the bailouts argued they were necessary to prevent economic collapse, while opponents argued it was not taxpayers' responsibility to provide aid.

Fifteen years later, it's worth running through where the bailout money went and how much of it has been returned.

Fannie And Freddie

Together, these two government-sponsored mortgage aggregators received more than $187 billion in taxpayer money to stay afloat. In exchange, Federal National Mortgage Association FNMA and Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp FMCC were placed under government conservatorship, and are in the process of being "recapitalized."

Related Link: Hefty Credit Suisse Bailout Costs $13,500 Per Person In Switzerland

Fortunately for taxpayers, Fannie and Freddie's businesses have been steadily improving since the worst of the crisis, and a large portion of both entities' profits has come back to the Treasury.

Result: $109 billion profit

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AIG

During the financial crisis, American International Group Inc AIG provided insurance to owners of sub-prime mortgage-backed securities. When it became clear that the company would have no means of paying the claims on these insurance policies on its own, the Treasury provided AIG with about $68 billion in taxpayer dollars in exchange for a near-80 percent equity stake in the company via warrants.

Since AIG's core insurance business was never the cause of its problems, the company began to recover as soon as the economy stabilized.

By the end of 2012, the Treasury had sold all of its shares of AIG stock.

Result: $5 billion profit

General Motors And Chrysler

When the U.S. auto industry was in danger of disappearing into oblivion in 2008, the Treasury stepped in with bailouts for General Motors Company GM and Chrysler to the tune of $50.7 billion and $10.7 billion respectively.

In the case of GM, the government received a near-60 percent stake in the restructured company. The Treasury sold the last of its GM shares in late 2013.

Most of Chrysler's bailout money, meanwhile, was paid back by the end of 2011, when the government sold its final 6 percent stake in the company to Italian automaker Fiat.

Result: $12.7 billion loss

Big Banks

The majority of the remaining 900-plus recipients of bailout funds were banks.

The largest bailout recipients were Bank of America Corp BAC and Citigroup Inc C, which each received $45 billion in disbursements from the Treasury. The Treasury eventually netted $4.5 billion in profit from Bank of America and $13.4 billion in profit from Citigroup in dividends and proceeds.

These types of profits were typical for the Treasury when it came to the bank bailouts, despite the fact that several smaller banks, such as CIT Group ($2.3 billion bailout), declared bankruptcy and never repaid their debts.

From the bailouts of Bank of America, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, and GMAC (now Ally Financial) alone, taxpayers netted a profit.

Result: $23 billion in profit

The Grand Total

When all was said and done, the U.S. Treasury coughed up $635 billion in bailout funds.

Result: $109 billion profit

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Some elements of this story were previously reported by Benzinga and it has been updated.

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