In an effort to reform the nation’s
housing finance system, Senate Banking Chairman Tim Johnson (D-S.D.) and ranking
member Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) will hold a markup for their bill Tuesday
at 10 a.m.
Given that close to 100 percent of
the U.S. mortgage market is now backed by the federal government, it is good
that Congress is tackling reform. Unfortunately, the
approach being taken in the Johnson–Crapo
bill would ensure that U.S. mortgage markets are slightly remodeled rather
than completely reformed.
>>> FACT: Fannie and
Freddie have received billions in subsidies, but the homeownership rate is only
1 percentage point higher than it was in 1968. Learn
more.
Today, the U.S. Treasury is keeping
Fannie and Freddie off the books—and hiding billions in taxpayer guarantees
in the process. The bill sponsored by Johnson and Crapo would ultimately leave
many of these problems intact.
Other lawmakers—such as Reps. Jeb Hensarling (R-Texas) and Justin Amash
(R-Mich.)—are intent on getting government out of the mortgage-backing
business.
>>> Related: Getting
Your Neighbor’s Mortgage Off Your Lawn
Posted in Capitol Hill, Front Page [slideshow_deploy]
No comments:
Post a Comment