Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Can Justify Their Existence
Letter to the Editor

Sir, Lawrence Summers ("Wake Up to the Dangers of a Deepening Crisis", November 26) thinks the U.S. government needs to take immediate steps to increase mortgage credit availability, including using Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to do so. In the same edition, your report "Tough stance on Fannie and Freddie is vindicated" suggests that instead these government-sponsored enterprises should continue to be constrained.

Who is right? Dr Summers is.

A government-sponsored entity (GSE) regulator, with a narrow role assigned by Congress, would of course worry about Fannie and Freddie's capital ratios. But from the broader view of the Congress itself, there is far greater risk to the financial system and the country from a crisis-induced shrinkage of mortgage credit and a possible downward-spiralling debt deflation than from whether Fannie and Freddie might develop low capital ratios.

Thus I propose that Fannie and Freddie should each be given by Congress a special $100billion new portfolio authority, to be used 100 per cent for--that is, only for--the refinancing of troubled subprime mortgages. They will easily be able to finance this new portfolio authority with issuance of their government-sponsored debt.

The only real excuse for Fannie and Freddie to exist at all is to help in times of housing finance crisis. Well, the housing finance crisis is here.

Alex J. Pollock is a resident fellow at AEI.

About the Author

 

Alex J.
Pollock
  • Alex Pollock joined AEI in 2004 after thirty-five years in banking. He was president and chief executive officer of the Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago from 1991 to 2004. He is the author of numerous articles on financial systems and the organizer of the “Deflating Bubble” series of AEI conferences. In 2007, he developed a one-page mortgage form to help borrowers understand their mortgage obligations. At AEI, he focuses on financial policy issues, including housing finance, government-sponsored enterprises, retirement finance, corporate governance, accounting standards, and the banking system. He is a director of the CME Group, the Great Lakes Higher Education Corporation, the International Union for Housing Finance, and the chairman of the board of the Great Books Foundation.

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  • Phone: 2028627190
    Email: apollock@aei.org
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