Capital Commerce

Up Next: Son of the Mother of All Bailouts

By James Pethokoukis

Posted: October 3, 2008

Today's lousy (though not terrible versus what's usually seen in a recession) jobs report is further evidence that the worst nightmare of Ben Bernanke and the Federal Reserve seems to be coming true. Fed economists call it an "adverse feedback loop." It goes like this: The plunging housing market creates a credit crunch, which drags down the economy and further weakens the housing market, and so on and so on. Rinse and repeat.

If so, look for increased pressure on Washington to more directly aid homeowners to support housing prices and stem the deluge of foreclosures. Liberals have been for this for some time. Bigger government is never a surprise coming from those folks. But more and more conservative economists I talk to are cooking up plans for the Son of the Mother of All Bailouts.

In the Wall Street Journal yesterday, former White House economist Glenn Hubbard offered a $400 billion to $600 billion plan through which the government would refinance all U.S. mortgages into 30-year fixed mortgages at 5.25 percent through Fannie and Freddie. And just the other day, I talked to another prominent conservative economist who suggested a somewhat similar plan. I asked whether all these plans didn't smell of socialism. The economist's answer: "I think that bridge has already been crossed."

Winner take all

It's very caring and generous of us to cover the greed of such nice CEO's as Richard Fuld of Lehman Brothers that ruined that firm and robbed it's investors and left with 500 million dollars of their money (now our money).

HillbillyBill of TN @ Oct 06, 2008 08:36:37 AM

Mother of all bailouts

I don't like the plan, but if the economists think it necessary, let me suggest an off-the-wall modification. First make sure the homeowners have the means to pay for the new fixed mortgage. If not, offer them an option to move to a less expensive home they can afford, losing perhaps whatever equity they may have in the one they cannot afford.

Kenneth Jones of PA @ Oct 03, 2008 23:43:56 PM

Don't Aid and Abet my Cousin

My family is made of two different types of people. One side spends their way to hell on credit, the other saves and uses only cash to buy homes, cars, etc. That's right cash. My mother owns everything she has free and clear. My cousin owes 350k with NO EQUITY. Don't bail her dumb a@@ out. She needs to learn the hard way.

Pointer, R of MO @ Oct 03, 2008 16:34:41 PM

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Capital Commerce

Capital Commerce

U.S. News business reporter Matthew Bandyk examines the issues, people, and debates that shape the nexus of political and economic life in the nation's capital.

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