http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/7957639D-75F1-4C4E-8B18-5B101E214A83.htm


*US aims to tackle mortgage crisis*

The US president has tried to calm financial market instability by
announcing proposals to help prevent homeowners from defaulting on risky
mortgages.

Failure to make payments - a rising trend in the US economy - has been
creating volatile global markets, raising concerns that the economy may fall
into recession.

George Bush said on Friday that economy was healthy enough to handle the
credit crisis and that high-risk mortgages represented a small part of the
US economy.

"The recent disturbances in the subprime mortgage industry are modest,
they're modest in relation to the size of our economy," he said.

But he emphasised that it was not the federal government's job to bail out
the mortgage lending industry, a comment that has caused US stock prices to
pare gains.

"The government's got a role to play. But it is limited. A federal bailout
of lenders would only encourage a recurrence of the problem," Bush said.

Home refinancing

Henry Paulson, the treasury secretary, later told National Public Radio that
the US administration would try to help people facing foreclosure find ways
to refinance.

"We can't keep everyone in their home," Paulson said.

"But we sure as heck can make a big effort to help those who have got the
capability to own a home refinance."

Democrats criticised Bush's stand-back approach and have urged more direct
action to protect homeowners who may not realise the problems they face as
their adjustable-rate mortgages reset with higher rates that push monthly
payments up.

Senator Barack Obama, who is running for president in 2008, said Bush was
not doing enough.

"For six years, the president and Congress have allowed lending industry
lobbyists to block sensible regulations that could have prevented this
crisis in the first place," he said.

"These are welcome steps, but the president's proposal does not go far
enough."

Private-sector lenders

Meanwhile, Bush urged lenders to work with homeowners to renegotiate their
mortgages to prevent default.

He called on Congress to approve legislation he proposed last year to
modernise the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), which provides mortgage
insurance to borrowers through a network of private-sector lenders.

The administration proposal would lower the required down payment for FHA
loans and raise the limit on eligible mortgages.

The FHA will soon launch a new programme called "FHA Secure" to allow
homeowners with good credit history, but who cannot afford their current
payments, to refinance into FHA-insured mortgages, Bush said.

He also pledged to work with the Democratic-led Congress to temporarily
reform a key housing provision of the federal tax code to make it easier for
homeowners to refinance their mortgages.

Democrats have accused the administration of being insensitive to the plight
of a rising tide of poorer Americans facing the threat of foreclosure.

Financial analysts said Bush's proposals were unlikely to have an immediate
impact on homeowners who may be in danger of defaulting on their mortgages.
"I don't think he's outlining a rescue plan.

This is more messaging. It's more pomp," Richard Steinberg, president of
Steinberg Global Asset Management, said.


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