Thursday, July 17, 2014

Why Do Banksters Get Help but Not Homeowners?

from opednews.com



By  (about the author)   




From youtube.com/watch?v=cW6GplzhegY: The once almighty Citigroup is now getting a third lifeline from the U.S. Treasury.
The once almighty Citigroup is now getting a third lifeline from the U.S. Treasury.
(image by YouTube)


It's time to start helping the people, and stop helping Wall Street.
According to an agreement announced earlier today, big bank Citigroup will pay $7 billion to settle a Department of Justice investigation into that bank's involvement with risky subprime mortgages.
The agreement stems from Citigroup's role in the trading of subprime mortgage securities, which helped to cause the 2007 financial collapse and Great Recession.
Of the $7 billion total settlement, $4 billion will be in the form of a civil monetary payment to the Department of Justice, $500 million will go to state attorney's general and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and an additional $2.5 billion will go towards "consumer relief."
But make no mistake about it. This agreement is another win for the big banks.
Under the agreement, Citigroup will most likely get a $500 million tax write-off. And in pre-market trading on Monday, Citigroup stocks rose by nearly 4 percent, despite the $7 billion agreement.
This is nothing more than a slap on the wrist for Citigroup; basically a cost of doing business.

And as for the mere $2.5 billion in consumer relief, while it will be going towards loan modifications, principal reduction and refinancing for distressed homeowners, it's nowhere near enough. And there are no guarantees it will make its way into the hands of the people Citigroup victimized, either.

If the Department of Justice was serious about holding Citigroup accountable for its actions, and helping the American people and economy recover from the Great Recession, then it would be taking a heck of a lot more than $7 billion, and giving that money directly to the American people.
It would be helping out American homeowners, instead of continuing to protect the big banks.

After all, it's consumers buying things like houses who drive demand and grow the economy. Not the big banks on Wall Street.

Directly helping out American homeowners after a crisis isn't some sort of radical idea or new thing we have to look at Sweden or Iceland to figure out, either.

We've done this sort of thing before, right here in the United States, and it worked very well.
Back in 1933, in the wake of the Great Depression, FDR signed into law the Home Owners' Loan Act of 1933, which created the Home Owners' Loan Corporation (HOLC).
The HOLC's main goal was to help refinance home mortgages that were in default or at risk of foreclosure because of the 1929 stock market crash and the previous collapse of the housing industry.

It did that by buying up old mortgages from the banks using government bonds -- borrowed money.

In a statement released after the act was signed into law, FDR said that, "In signing the 'Home Owners Loan Act of 1933,' I feel that we have taken another important step toward the ending of deflation which was rapidly depriving many millions of farm and home owners from the title and equity to their property."

By the mid-1930's, the HOLC had helped to refinance nearly 20 percent of urban homes in America.

And by 1936, the final year that the HOLC was buying mortgages, it had helped to provide Americans with over one million new mortgages, and had loaned out nearly $750 billion in today's dollars.

That's right; $750 billion in today's dollars. That makes the $2.5 billion from the Citigroup agreement going towards consumer relief seem like nothing.

To this day, the HOLC is credited with relieving the financial burdens of millions of Americans, and helping to right the American economy.

If we're serious about rebuilding the American economy, and helping out the millions of Americans who still struggle to keep a roof over their heads, then we need to be doing a lot more than just forcing one bank to handle $2.5 billion in consumer relief and trusting the bank to distribute it responsibly.

We need to stop caring so much about the well-being of Wall Street, and start caring about the American people and economy.

No American should have to go to bed tonight worrying if they're going to become homeless tomorrow.



http://www.thomhartmann.com

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