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May 24, 2013
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Mortgage Debt Relief? Not on His WatchPosted on Aug 4, 2012
The Federal Reserve announced last week that it would launch no new stimulus programs to jump-start the economy, and editors at The Washington Post applauded Edward DeMarco, acting director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, for refusing to refinance mortgages for struggling homeowners. Though the proposed refinancing program would have provided relief for Americans desperate to keep their homes while providing a small stimulus by allowing them to spend more of their incomes in the American economy, DeMarco said the program may have ended up costing taxpayers some money. “Not much, but some,” New York magazine reports. DeMarco’s response is another example of deficit hawkery—the refusal to spend money to save or make money based on the idea that reducing government spending and debt, rather than public suffering, is the first duty of public officials. Deficit hawks, at least in the U.S. Congress and Washington’s lobbying community, are not a part of that public. For them, there is no recession. So why should they give a damn? —Posted by Alexander Reed Kelly.
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