Fannie and Freddie: The Sequel
About my previous missive on the government bailout of private companies, a reader wrote this: “Who authorized the ‘government’ to bail out these companies? (Was it) even debated in Congress? The millions of Americans who have lost their homes or are in danger of losing their homes would surely have a different opinion about what those blank checks should be used for.”
The question isn’t just a fair one. It’s a critical one.
Throughout the weekend and as you read this, key members of Congress continued work on a bill that would authorize the U.S. government to take over approximately $700 billion to $800 billion in bad debt created by banks and lending institutions.
President George W. Bush told reporters last week that he does not know the ultimate cost to taxpayers but Bush said that he believes the taxpayers would get “most of it” back some time.
Media reports state that the plan would require Congress to authorize increasing the cap for the U.S. national debt to nearly $12 trillion from its approximately $10-trillion cap now, debt that already costs the U.S some $500 billion in interest each year.
An Associated Press report on the proposed bill to authorize this massive take over of private-company debt stands at about three pages, pretty thin when it comes to federal law. Reports say that what the draft does not contain is two provisions:
- A requirement that the financial institutions pay back the government for the loan.
- A provision that would include money for strapped homeowners facing defaults on mortgages.
How did all this chaos ensue?
Most experts — even those free-market, no government-regulation defenders — point to a fairly consistent pattern of deregulation starting back in the Carter administration.
Both Democrats and republicans have been “party” to that pattern.
As I wrote earlier, it seems this country’s leaders learned little from the savings and loan debacle of the early 1990s.
But that’s history and this is now.
And every American can claim a stake in the economic future of this country. So get online and learn as much as you can and quickly about what taxpayers face in the days ahead. Then use these e-mail addresses of your representatives in Congress.
Tell them exactly how you feel — and how going forward you plan to vote based on those feelings.
Resources:
- Bailout FAQ: www.businessweek.com/election/2008/blog…
And guess what the proposed bill does contain: Section 8 would give broad and unchecked authority to the U.S. Treasury secretary.
It states: “Decisions by the Secretary pursuant to the authority of this Act are non-reviewable and committed to agency discretion, and may not be reviewed by any court of law or any administrative agency.”
If Congress were to pass the bill with this stipulation, it will have given up its constitutional role as the minder of the country’s money.
Read Mac Mckerral’s related blog AIF, Fannie, Freddie, free markets and frustration

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