For Immediate Release: September 8, 2008
Contact: Alan Barber, (202) 293-5380 x115

Statement on the Conservatorship of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac

By Dean Baker

Secretary Paulson's decision to put Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac under a
conservatorship was the right move at the right time. As the market
reaction shows, it removed an important source of uncertainty in the
housing market and in financial markets more generally. The big
question now is what these institutions will look like going forward.
There is a strong argument for keeping these institutions public.

First, it is important to be clear on why Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
faced collapse. These mortgage giants went under because they were
somehow unable to recognize the housing bubble and to adjust their
lending to protect themselves against the inevitable crash. It is
their job to know the housing market and to recognize a bubble.
Furthermore, if Fannie and Freddie had begun to tighten credit five or
six years ago, when house prices were already clearly out of line,
they could have stopped the growth of the bubble before it reached
such dangerous proportions.

The current disaster should not lead people to forget the benefits
that these companies conveyed to homeowners. By creating the
secondary-mortgage market, they created first a national and then an
international market for home mortgages. This had the effect of
equalizing interest rates across the country and making homeownership
affordable to millions of families.

There is still a very big need for Fannie and Freddie to ensure a
well-operating secondary-mortgage market. However, it is not clear
what benefit the country would get by returning them to their mixed
public-private status. In effect, both Fannie and Freddie can be
operated as public corporations, which was the case with Fannie Mae
prior to its privatization in 1968.

The private sector should take the leading role in most areas of the
economy because it is more innovative and more willing to take risks
than the public sector. However, it is not clear that we want a lot of
innovation in the secondary mortgage market. Financial innovations in
the mortgage market helped extend the housing bubble and are the basis
of much of the financial turmoil now facing the country and the world.

We would have benefited enormously had Fannie and Freddie operated in
a conservative manner - buying up mortgages that met solid lending
criteria, and packing them into standard mortgage-backed securities.
Fannie and Freddie's eagerness to keep market share, even at the cost
of acquiring riskier mortgages, was the main cause of their
bankruptcy. Their innovative private sector practices are likely to
cost taxpayers tens of billions of dollars in this bailout, in
addition to the much greater harm they caused to the economy by
extending the housing bubble.

In the future, Fannie and Freddie can best serve their role of
providing the stable anchor of the secondary-mortgage market by being
government corporations. These companies are playing with the
taxpayers' dollars. While the public guarantee of Fannie and Freddie
debt is necessary to ensure the stability of the secondary-mortgage
market, there is no reason that this guarantee should apply to any
investment on which their top executives choose to gamble.

-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to