Search Results
-
FILTER BY DATEAll Time
-
-
FILTER BY RELEVANCEMost Relevant
-
-
FILTER BY CONTENT TYPEAll Content Types
-
In 2011, the Government Mortgage Complex accounted for 88 percent of all first-mortgage originations in the United States, with the government also controlling an estimated 90 percent of the student loan market. The government’s growing dominance in the home mortgage and student loan categories is cause for concern, posing a threat to private investors, borrowers, and taxpayers.
This event will address the problems and improvements needed for student loans, beginning with a keynote presentation by former secretary of education Bill Bennett.
The expansion of agency debt not only imposes risk and realized losses on taxpayers, it also increases the cost of Treasury's direct financing, by creating a huge pool of alternate government-backed securities to compete with Treasury securities, and thus increases the interest cost to taxpayers.
The hard job of addressing the unresolved problems in the mortgage market remains unaddressed and financial authorities have to end the charade that the problematic loans made as the real-estate bubble inflated will be repaid.
Twelve years into the 21st century, the dominant financial and economic fact is that we are still living in the wake of athe vast housing and mortgage bubble, which peaked in mid-2006, almost six years ago.
At this event, our panel of experts will share their thoughts on Bubble Trouble.
Few recognize just how troubled this government agency really is. When measured against the accounting system used by private mortgage insurers, the FHA is deeply insolvent, with a capital shortfall of tens of billions of dollars. If it were a private firm, state regulators would immediately shut it down.
Europe's banks and entire monetary system are in crisis from the sovereign debt of financially weak governments. But the capital requirement for banks to hold such Euro denominated debt was zero. It was defined as "risk free," but has instead led to massive losses.







