It just doesn't stop, and much of it has to do with having Wall Street suckups like Geithner and Summers as advisors. TARP (enthusiastically endorsed by Obama) and the trillion-dollar giveaway to insurance company CEO's (i.e. HCR) apparently weren't enough.
http://thehill.com/blogs/on-the-money/banking-financial-institutions/114349-banks-to-benefit-most-from-white-house-program-to-stave-off-foreclosuresBanks to benefit most from White House program to help fight foreclosuresBanks will get the biggest benefit from an Obama administration housing program designed to help unemployed homeowners escape foreclosure.
Housing experts expressed concern that banks, not homeowners, will be helped by the White House's $3 billion funding infusion -- $2 billion from the Treasury Department and another $1 billion from the Housing and Urban Development Department -- going to those states hit hardest by the housing market crash and unemployment.
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If the recently announced program is expected to work there has to be a reasonable expectation that at the end of the two-year program homeowners will have some equity in their property.
"If that's not the case, then it's not worth it," he (Dean Baker) said.
He said he'd be "very surprised" if the vast majority of those who take advantage of the program don't eventually lose their homes.
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David Abromowitz, senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, said the main problem with the funding is that lenders will benefit without requiring any concessions or matching of the federal aid.
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Despite his reservations with the funding, he emphasized that with millions facing foreclosure, the fragile economy and a slowing economic recovery, "anything that slows or stops foreclosures is good."
One of those things that most certainly would have slowed and stopped foreclosures -- and it wouldn't have cost a dime of taxpayer money -- was to allow
mortage cramdown -- giving judges the ability to cut mortgage terms. However, Obama notably
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/05/08/white-house-silence-may-h_n_199892.html">never lent the mortgage cramdown legislation any support, and the bill died on the vine.