Roosevelt-era reforms are saving capitalism—again.
By Daniel Gross [in SLATE]
Posted Tuesday, March 25, 2008, at 3:29 PM ET

In the 1930s, Franklin Delano Roosevelt saved American capitalism from
its own self-inflicted wounds by erecting a new financial
infrastructure—often over the vociferous opposition of the bankers and
investors whose poor judgment had helped precipitate the Great
Depression. During the New Deal, the government reacted to a
disastrous systemic failure by creating the sort of backstops,
insurance, and risk-spreading mechanisms the market had failed to
develop on its own, such as deposit insurance, federal securities
registration, and federally sponsored entities that would insure
mortgages.

Despite sustained efforts to tear down the New Deal—from the repeal of
the Glass-Steagall Act in 1999 to President George W. Bush's ill-fated
2005 efforts to dismantle Social Security—the 1930s-vintage
infrastructure has proved remarkably durable. And this crisis has
elicited new experiments in policy, just as the Great Depression did.
The Federal Reserve has been systematically lowering its standards for
what it will accept as collateral for loans. This week, Hillary
Clinton called for a national panel to recommend solutions to the
housing morass. (She said the group should include former Federal
Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, which is a little like Chicago
appointing a cow to a panel on preventing disastrous fires.) But as
the nation once again confronts a systemic failure in housing and
housing-related credit, the Bush administration is going back to the
future, using New Deal-era agencies as the cornerstone of its
response.

Although the Tennessee Valley Authority has yet to pitch in, four
70-year-old agencies are helping to cushion the blow of the housing
bust. Let's count them.

1. The Federal Home Loan Bank system. Last year, the model of
originating and securitizing mortgages began to break down in the wake
of the subprime debacle. Mortgage companies that relied on the capital
markets (rather than deposits) to raise the money for mortgages
suddenly found themselves starved for cash. Many of them turned to the
FHLB, which was created in 1932 (so let's give that one to Herbert
Hoover) and provides capital to lenders. Indeed, had it not been for
the FHLB, it's possible that the nation's largest mortgage lender,
Countrywide Financial Corp., might have gone under. Sen. Charles
Schumer, D-N.Y., noted last fall that Countrywide borrowed a whopping
$51.4 billion from the Atlanta FHLB as its troubles mounted. On
Monday, the FHLB pitched in again, relaxing regulations on member
banks to allow them to double the number of mortgage-backed securities
issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac that they can hold on their books
for the next two years. The FHLB noted that this measure could allow
member banks to purchase more than $100 billion worth of such
securities.

2. The Federal Housing Authority. The FHA, which was created in 1934,
insures mortgages made by approved lenders to borrowers who are
creditworthy but not particularly affluent. As the mortgage market
grew like Topsy and subprime lenders peddled credit to underserved
markets, the FHA may have seemed outdated. But in the wake of the
subprime debacle, the FHA has suddenly become an important part of the
effort to stanch the rising tide of foreclosures. Last summer, it
created FHASecure, a program that lets certain borrowers switch from
adjustable-rate mortgages into fixed-rate mortgages. "From September
to December 2007, FHA facilitated more than $38 billion of much-needed
mortgage activity in the housing market, more than $15 billion of
which was through FHASecure, FHA's refinancing product." As part of
the recently passed stimulus package, the FHA is also temporarily
jacking up the size of the mortgages it will insure (in high-cost
housing areas) from $362,790 to $729,750.

3. The Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae), which was
created in 1938. Fannie Mae purchases so-called conforming mortgages
(mortgages under a certain size) made by other lenders and packages
them into securities, which it effectively insures. (Here's a
historical table of the conforming loan limit, which was $417,000 for
a single home last year.) Fannie Mae and its brother
government-sponsored enterprise, Freddie Mac, are playing a central
role in the federal response to the housing crisis. The stimulus
package boosted the size of the loans Fannie and Freddie can buy, from
$417,000 to "125 percent of the area median home price in high-cost
areas, not to exceed $729,750." And then earlier this month, OFHEO,
the body that regulates Fannie and Freddie, said it would lift the cap
on the amount of capital they could use to buy mortgage-backed
securities and make loans, providing "up to $200 billion of immediate
liquidity to the mortgage-backed securities market."

4. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. The FDIC, which was founded in
1933 and insures bank deposits, is playing more of a passive role.
Many of the financial institutions that have failed or suffered
near-death experiences in the current crisis—subprime lenders, jumbo
lenders like Thornburg Mortgage and Bear Stearns—essentially fell
victim to runs on the bank. Once customers and counterparties came to
believe that it wasn't safe to do business with these firms, their
days were numbered. But one sector has been largely immune from runs
on the bank—banks themselves. Even as banking companies have racked up
significant losses on soured loans, and even as some tiny banks have
failed, Americans haven't rushed to yank their cash out of their
checking and savings accounts. The reason: In the event of a failure,
depositors with $100,000 or less at FDIC-insured institutions are made
whole.
-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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