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Stimulus Package Summary


This Summary is a reprinted message from the National Association of Realtors
The Bill Will Help Homeowners and Borrowers

The Senate legislation responded to the criticisms that lenders have been slow and/or unwilling to work with homeowners and borrowers. It encouraged negotiation in short sales and consumer efforts to refinance or reconfigure existing mortgages:

Tax Relief

The Senate added an extensive package of extensions of expired and expiring provisions that had passed previously on a vote of 93 - 2. Extended provisions include the 15-year life on leasehold improvements, brownfields clean-up deductions, deductions for mortgage insurance premiums and relief from the Alternative Minimum Tax.

The Bill Will Get Money into the Financial System Quickly

The credit markets are nearly frozen. Lenders can’t lend because they are receiving no payments on existing loans. The legislation allowed the government to buy troubled loans and mortgage securities. The funds that the institutions received when the government purchased the existing portfolios were to be available to issue new mortgages with more carefully specified and monitored lending standards. Provisions include:

Follow, Protect and Watch Over the Money

Congress will keep a tight rein on TARP. Congress will have the assistance of numerous agencies charged with specific tasks and reporting responsibilities:

Put Brakes on the Bad Guys

Congress wanted to curtail “bad acts” of executives who gambled and lost.

Give the Taxpayers a Stake in the Profits

Historically, when the government has intervened to shore up a company’s or government’s financial dealings (such as the loan guarantees made to Chrysler and the aid given to New York City during a fiscal crisis), the long-term effect has been that the government has made money back on the deal. The legislation provided an “upside” benefit for taxpayers:

Safeguard Savings

Increase the amount of federal insurance on bank accounts from $100,000 to $250,000. This will be particularly helpful to smaller and local banks and small businesses.

Recoup What’s Still Owed

If, after five years from the date of enactment (the date the President signs a bill), the program has lost money, the sitting President will be required to present a plan to Congress for ways to recover the funds from the financial institutions that benefited from the TARP relief.

  1. foreclosure

    It was interesting to browse trough :-) keep up the good work and thanks for sharing this the valuable information.

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