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Wednesday, July 30, 2008
Larry Kudlow :: Townhall.com Columnist
McCain Talks Straight on the Fan-Fred Reform
by Larry Kudlow
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There will be no more business as usual for housing lenders Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac if John McCain is elected president. That’s McCain’s clear message in a recent hard-hitting op-ed in the St. Petersburg Times and in various straight-talk media interviews.

Politically powerful Fannie and Freddie may be popping champagne corks in Washington, where a congressional bailout package provides full government backing for their outsized management pay packages, massive political-contribution and lobbying practices, and private portfolio hedge-fund activities. These government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) got just what they wanted, and they now have the power to pay more dividends to their shareholders without any caps on compensation.

But Big Mac is gonna put an end to this if he’s elected come November.

“Americans should be outraged at the latest sweetheart deal in Washington,” writes McCain. “Congress will put U.S. taxpayers on the hook for potentially hundreds of billions of dollars to bail out Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. It’s a tribute to what these two institutions -- which most Americans have never heard of -- have bought with more than $170-million worth of lobbyists in the past decade.”

Fannie and Freddie represent the worst of Washington’s bailout fever. Using government power for private profit is how Wall Street Journal editor Paul Gigot puts it. Privatizing gains while socializing losses is the complaint registered by former House majority leader Dick Armey. Government semi-socialism is how I see it.

The GSEs spread political vigorish in turn for more power and more privilege. Just this year alone their portfolio caps were raised twice while their capital reserve requirements were lowered. And now, with an explicit government guarantee, unlimited credit lines, and the possibility of federal stock purchases, they’ll be GSEs on steroids. All this in the name of helping housing, the most favored political sector in the American economy.

Budget assistance for homebuyers is already staggering. The Housing and Urban Development department spends $52 billion a year. The home mortgage interest deduction is worth about $80 billion yearly. A capital-gains exclusion is estimated at $29 billion. And the local property-tax deduction comes to roughly $14 billion. That’s a total of $175 billion in annual assistance to the housing sector. And that’s before we get to the Fannie-Freddie bailout.

Some people talk about a so-called Marshall Plan to spur American energy independence. But for years we’ve had a Marshall Plan for housing. It’s enough already. There are other economic sectors worthy of investment.

John McCain has taken a strong reform position here, and he’s totally right. This is McCain at his very best. He argues that Fannie and Freddie employees manipulated financial reports to line the pockets of senior executives. He calls the GSEs a danger to financial markets. And he says if one dime of taxpayer money ends up in those institutions “the management and the board should immediately be replaced, multimillion dollar salaries should be cut, and bonuses and other compensation should be eliminated. They should cease all lobbying activities and drop all payments to outside lobbyists.” Continued...

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About The Author

Lawrence Kudlow is host of CNBC's Kudlow & Company

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Saving Fannie and Freddie
Inflation has been government policy since Johnson's 1960s guns and butter policies.

Buying a house with 20%, 10%, 5%, and 0% down enables the owner to escape the loss of purchasing power of the constantly inflating dollar and to use it to advantage to accumulate savings for retirement or any other purpose.

At 3% inflation, a 20% down payment on a house earns 15% compound interest, at 10% earns 30%, at 5% earns 60%, and at no money down 100% or more.

Since the1913 start of the income tax, rent was never imputed as income to home ownership, and mortgage interest and property taxes were always deductible, because a house is an investment and imputed income on anything owned is not cash income.

Imputed income would apply to both goods and services: a house, a car, clothing, appliances, a spouse, a parent, government, etc.

The Japanese stayed in their homes for over a decade despite negative equity. Americans can too, if allowed. A house after all provides shelter and a source of income, if costs are shared, as well as tax deductions. An owner at a 3% to 5% interest rate rather than a 6% rate who will protect and maintain the property is better than no payments and vandalism. It is what, in effect, is going to happen anyway, just with a different owner. Further, comparable values will drop far less, minimizing the losses to all.


rob...of LA....
Boy that would be great..hunter for gov.!
I don't know if someone could move him that way
or not....but your idea..hmmm???!
I can understand some people not being warm to Mitt..they really don't know him real well, and he has changed his postion on some issues..but believe me he is now back home(about 98.6574%
of us mormons are very conservative.).and we would not vote for that idiot..senator Harry Reid(nev.) for dog catcher..and he's a mormon
Iam embarrassed to admit!
Thanks for your condolences on my wife's job loss, that is nice of you. I spent my last 4 months of my church mission in LA. lots of...
vegetation...it was nice but that was over 40 years ago.
When I think of Mitt..I think of what one blogger said about Flip-floppping: A guy says
When I get home Iam going to go jump into my swimming pool..he gets home ...the water is drained out! smile . He is set where he is
the PRODIGAL SON (POLITICALLY) HAS COME HOME TO STAY!
elvis
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