Obama's plan has three main parts:
1. Better regulation. He has called for the Federal Reserve to take
charge, rather than have some regulators watch banks and other
regulators eye investment banks. More disclosure from financial firms
would be required, while a financial market oversight commission would
be formed to identify problems before they become so severe they drag
down the economy.
2. Help for homeowners. Obama's plan includes support for Sen.
Christopher Dodd (D-Conn.) to create a program in which lenders buy or
refinance existing mortgages. Those mortgages would be converted into
30-year, fixed-rate loans with a federal guarantee. The Illinois
senator would also ask lenders to compose mortgages to reflect current
housing values. In addition, he has supported a tax break for
homeowners who don't itemize deductions. (Currently, you have to
itemize deductions on Schedule A of your tax return to get tax savings
for paying mortgage interest.)
3. Federal funds. Much like that of his Democratic rival, the third
part of Obama's plan calls for a $30 billion stimulus package. What
differs is that of those funds, $10 billion would go into a
"foreclosure prevention fund" which would apply to homeowners
occupying a principal residence, not to investors or to owners of
vacation homes. Another $10 billion would go to state and local
governments to help forestall cuts in vital services. The rest of the
money would be used for extending and expanding unemployment benefits.

McCain has said that it is "not the duty of government to bail out and
reward those who act irresponsibly, whether they are big banks or
small borrowers." He has proposed limited, temporary measures to help
housing.

The McCain plan includes:

1. Mortgage transparency. McCain would require mortgages to be written
so they are more easily understood by borrowers. In return, borrowers
would be penalized for submitting false information on loan
applications.
2. Lender accountability. Responsibility for the quality and
performance of loans would be in the hands of lenders, and strict
lending standards would be applied to the lending process.
3. Down-payment realism. For loans to be insured by the Federal
Housing Administration, larger down payments would be required.
4. Stronger safety nets. In McCain's plan, financial institutions
would be encouraged to increase capital reserves to serve as
protection from losses.


How do Obama's and McCain's plans measure up? That may depend on
whether you favor more government intervention or prefer to see Uncle
Sam on the sidelines.

"McCain really doesn't have a plan," says Lance Freeman, an associate
professor at Columbia University and noted housing expert. "He has a
set of principles that would guide him. In general, he would take a
hands-off approach."

With this approach, Freeman says, those who make bad choices in the
future would have less expectation that the federal government would
bail them out. "In addition," he points out, "the housing market is
overvalued now. If the government does nothing, housing prices will
probably decline to normal levels more quickly."

On the downside, people would lose their homes as the housing market
returns to normalcy. There is also an "enormous risk" that other
people and other sectors of the economy will be harmed as well, during
the revaluation process.

"Foreclosed properties harm entire neighborhoods, not just the people
losing their homes," Freeman says. "If large numbers of properties are
foreclosed, the housing market will decline further and this could
damage the economy even more."

Freeman finds that Obama's ideas go a long way toward reducing some of
the inequities in the government's treatment of homeowners. "In
particular, extending the mortgage interest tax benefit to families
that do not itemize will help low- and moderate-income homeowners," he
adds.

On Sep 24, 10:47 pm, voxitar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 24, 2008 at 5:52 PM, VT Sean Lewis
>
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Funny Obama had his plan out before McCains yet
> > McCains plan looks a lot like Obama's
>
> Plan?  What plan?  When asked about what he would do about the economy
> as president, Obama said "present."
>
> Unless Urkel pulled a plan out his ass in the last few hours, there
> ain't no plan.
>
>
>
> > Tell me what Mr. the economy is doing fine is going to
> > add to the discussion?
>
> > His good judgement?
>
> You mean like the judgement he showed when he co-sponsored the Federal
> Housing Enterprise Regulatory Reform Act of 2005 that would have
> REFORMED Fannie and Freddie and likely would have prevented the
> current crisis had it been supported by Democrats?  Why, yes, that
> good judgement will come in quite handy.
>
>
>
> > McCain said there was no crisis 10 days ago, WRONG.
>
> You are wrong, indeed - 10 days ago McCain told Harry Smith during an
> interview the economy was, in fact, "in crisis."
>
>
>
> > McCain was proud he helped to deregulate the industry, WRONG.
>
> Deregulation doesn't mean the oversight from Congress is supposed to
> STOP, dude!  Where was Chris Dodd and Barney Frank these last two
> years?  Oh yeah, that's right - enriching themselves with donations
> from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
>
>
>
> > McCain wants to make the Bush tax cust permanent because it
> > stimulated the economy, WRONG.
>
> Had it not been for those Bush tax cuts, we likely still would be in
> the recession Clinton left us.
>
>
>
> > Yeah lets get McCain in the discussion to earn the lobby money
> > Of $2,000,000 paid to his campaign manager.
>
> I'll take your 2 million and raise you 88 million...that gets us to
> the 90 million dollars Obama economic adviser Franklin Raines, former
> CEO for Fannie Mae, took as he drove Fannie into the ground via fraud
> and corruption....dude, I can play tit-for-tat with you all fuckin'
> day...bring it on!
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