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Sunday, February 5, 2012

The Foreclosure Crisis: A Government in Denial


Foreclosed homes behind a padlock in North
Las Vegas, 11/17/11. (photo: Jewel S
amad/AFP/Getty Images)
By Bruce Judson, New Deal 2.0
14 January 12

s we start the New Year, the executive branch and Congress continue to pretend the gravest risk to our economy and social stability does not exist: the ongoing foreclosure crisis. The financial crisis began with the housing crisis and it will not end until we resolve housing. Government policymakers who seemingly ignore this basic fact are leading the nation to another potential catastrophe.

This past week, a number of important events occurred in Washington, including important recess appointments by President Obama. However, the most noteworthy event did not make front page news: the Federal Reserve's (apparently) unsolicited memo to the committees of Congress that oversee financial services warning of the dangers the current housing market poses for the economy.

This represents an extraordinary action and underscores both the seriousness of the continuing crisis and the absence of meaningful discussion of the problem in Washington. Bernanke's memo reviewed federal actions to date and effectively concluded that they were unlikely to solve this national tragedy. The memo concluded, in part: READ MORE

1 comment:



  1. Robert Schultz wrote
    govt statistics say about 160,000 homeless vs. 18,000,000 housing vacancies. works out to just over 100 vacancies for each homeless person. Aint free markets grand?

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    Mo wrote:

    How many homeless families in shelters, motels and campgrounds and motor homes? America, the Richest Nation in the world? SICK!

    ReplyDelete

Just keep it civil.