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Florida Foreclosures
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Heavy campaign contributions by those benefiting from this scheme induced
Members of Congress to avert their gaze from the ugly mess that was
unfolding.
The Danger of Government Guarantees by Senator Fred Thompson
I’ll bet it came as a surprise to most folks that the financial stability of
the world as we know it depends upon the survival of a couple of outfits
called Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Yet that’s what the so-called experts are
telling us. Moreover, we taxpayers are now being asked to guarantee Fannie
and Freddie’s tab, one that could make the $124 billion S&L bailout of the
late 1980s look cheap.
So how did we get stuck with this bill? Well, Congress wanted to “do
something” about what it saw as a “housing problem.” To them that meant that
they should create an even bigger problem.
So Congress passed laws that made it easier for hopeful home-buyers to buy
houses … even when they couldn’t afford them. Then the Fed and other
regulators helped, in the form of easy money and loose credit standards for
mortgages.
Not surprisingly demand for houses grew, home prices rose, lenders financed
additional questionable mortgages, fueling even higher prices and so on. You
get the picture. This is called a bubble.
Then an amazing thing happened – apparently impossible to foresee. Home
prices did not continue to rise forever! Home prices came down and easy
money dried up, causing the above mentioned cycle to reverse. In other
words, the bubble burst.
So you’d think the in-over-their-heads homebuyers and the mortgage bankers
would take the hit, and the market would right itself. No reason for an
international meltdown here, right?
Not so fast my friends. Years earlier Congress established Fannie and
Freddie as purchasers of these mortgages, which they could bundle up,
repackage and sell to investors, freeing up more mortgage money. As
government creations tend to do, the two companies grew until they either
owned or guaranteed about half the nation’s $12 trillion dollars in
mortgages.
Fannie and Fred were “government sponsored enterprises” which means heads
they win, tails you lose. If they make money stockholders, creditors and
Fannie and Freddie employees – some making millions annually – get the
benefit. But now that mortgages have hit the skids, with mounting losses,
the taxpayers potentially face trillions in exposure. This is because there
is an “implicit” (read “actual”) government guarantee of Fannie and
Freddie’s obligations and both are now too big to be allowed to fail. This
is called the “bailout phase,” which will probably lead to a bigger bubble
in the future.
Lost in this immense, complex mess is the root problem most people are
missing: the government is gradually becoming the guarantor of seemingly
every important aspect of American secular life, creating incentives and
bureaucracies that cause failure and invite fraud.
In Fan and Fred’s case, it was in no one’s interest to turn off the bubble
machine. Just the opposite. The system induced borrowers to take on
financial obligations they could not afford and lenders to lower lending
standards. Fannie and Freddie went along because their managers’
compensation depended on the firms’ short term financial performance. And
investors continued to buy complex security packages they didn’t understand,
because the securities were viewed as government-backed.
Heavy campaign contributions by those benefiting from this scheme induced
Members of Congress to avert their gaze from the ugly mess that was
unfolding.
You’d think we’d have learned by now: when the backstop of the federal
treasury makes it easier for politicians, lenders, borrowers, welfare
recipients, government contractors, or anyone else, to serve their own self
interest at the expense of the taxpayer, many will do just that.
That is why we continue to see self-dealing, moral lapses, outright fraud
and lack of management and oversight in a wide array of programs and
government-sponsored entities, from housing to Medicare, education and the
Small Business Administration, all costing taxpayers billions, even
trillions of dollars.
Our Founding Fathers knew more than a little bit about human nature. It is
one reason why in the Constitution, the federal government was given certain
delineated powers and no others. I hate to burst another bubble, but our
government simply doesn’t have the authority or the capability to be the
guarantor or insurer of our every need or desire. Isn’t it time we started
sending that message loud and clear to the big enablers in Washington?
Senator Fred Thompson
www.fredpac.com
FredPAC info@fredpac.com
Fred Thompson PAC 10332 Main Street #364 Fairfax, VA 22030
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