Posts Tagged ‘department of treasury’

Obama’s Job Plan Will Be More Successful if Driven by the Private Sector

Monday, December 21st, 2009

Job creation is driven by private sector investment, not government stimulus.President Barack Obama is well aware that private sector investment creates the majority of sustainable jobs, even though it goes against human nature to invest during hard economic times.  Federal stimulus money has saved/created between 600,000 and 1,500,000 jobs, according to the Congressional Budget Office – a faction of the 7,500,000 million jobs lost.  Lest we fault the Obama administration, remember that we generated one-third as many jobs during this decade as the 1990s.

According to Architecture 2030′s e-news bulletin, “Funding infrastructure projects with more stimulus dollars will not put America back to work. Why not?  Because infrastructure projects depend on tax revenue and the generator of tax revenue is the private sector.  Funding infrastructure projects with stimulus funds simply substitutes federal dollars for tax revenue dollars.  While some infrastructure spending and financial help to state and local governments is warranted, it will not put America back to work.  Each $1 billion of federal infrastructure spending creates only 7,667 one-time construction jobs and 9,000 indirect jobs.”

So what is the answer?  Architecture 2030 notes that, “The real engine behind American jobs is private building sector construction.  This sector is an amazing jobs machine, employing millions of Americans, spurring economic activity in almost every other U.S. sector, and generating large amounts of private investment and spending, as well as the tax revenue needed for infrastructure projects and other public services.  The bad news is the construction industry is reeling” and impacting many other sectors of the U.S. economy.

How Do You Solve a Problem Like TARP?

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

The Obama Administration is giving serious thought to the best use of the remaining funds that are part of the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) financial bailout. The President – under pressure to bring down the deficit that has grown as the government seeks to reverse the economic crisis — is considering using a significant amount of the leftover funds to reduce the national debt.The government is considering how to spend $139 billion in remaining TARP funds.

Approximately $139 billion of the $700 billion financial bailout program passed last year remains unspent and available to the Treasury Department.  Financial institutions have returned approximately $71 billion in TARP funds to the government and paid an additional $10 billion in interest and dividends to the Treasury Department.  The struggling economy and high unemployment rates are the impetus for paying down nearly $200 billion of the $12 trillion national debt.

Some Democrats in Congress think that unspent TARP funds should be used as an antidote to rising unemployment.  According to Representative John B. Larson (D-CT), chairman of the House Democratic Caucus, lawmakers could send a strong message about their priorities by using TARP funds to pay for road and bridge projects and other efforts that will create jobs.  “We want to look at how Wall Street can refund Main Street,” Larson said, noting that he and other senior House Democrats are considering a tax on financial transactions.  One possible use of unspent TARP funds could be payouts to small business programs to jump start job growth.

Obama’s Housing Plan Seeks to Help Homeowners in Trouble

Monday, March 2nd, 2009

Residential, Financing

Nine million homeowners can breathe a preliminary sigh of relief.  They may get to keep their homes now that President Obama has unveiled his ambitious – and larger than expected — $75 billion mortgage relief plan.  At the same time, the Treasury Department will double the size of its support of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.  The government, which seized the mortgage finance companies last fall, will absorb up to $200 billion in losses at each company.

The massive Homeowner Stability Initiative is intended to help the five million borrowers who are said to be “under water” to refinance their home loans.  Additionally, it provides incentive payments to mortgage lenders to assist as many as four million families who are either already in or on the verge of foreclosure.

Obama chose the Phoenix area as the venue for his announcement because it has been hit hard by foreclosures.  He believes that putting a halt to foreclosures is key to turning around the economy.  The plan is sound and proof that Geithner can deliver specifics and bold initiatives when he needs to. bittinger_sinking_house1

It will be interesting to see if the President gets the bipartisan support that he wants from Congress to pass this vital legislation.  Obama, who likes to strike a fine balance between hope and skepticism, describes himself as an eternal optimist – though anything but a “sap”.  The Democratic majority in the House is comfortable enough that this legislation will ease through that chamber.  When the bill moves to the Senate, however, Obama may once again need to twist a few Republican arms to avoid a filibuster.