Thursday
Nov132008
Senator Dodd: “Foreclosure crisis is the root cause of the larger financial crisis”
The Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs held a hearing today on "Oversight of the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act: Examining Financial Institution Use of Funding Under the Capital Purchase Program."
Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd (D-Conn.) voiced his concerns over how the money for the $700 billion Emergency Economic Stabilization Act (EESA) was being used.
"The acceptance of public funding carries with it a public obligation," said Dodd. "One cannot benefit from taxpayer support in all its many forms and assume that one has no duty to serve that same taxpayer."
Dodd expected lenders who received some of the $700 billion to preserve homeownership. “The foreclosure crisis is the root cause of the larger financial crisis...Until we solve the foreclosure problem, we will not have any hope of solving larger economic problems.”
The Senator was critical of lenders who had received public funds and used the money to buy other financial firms or give their executives benefits rather than give out loans. “Credit is the lifeblood of the economy...Lenders have a duty to use these funds to make affordable loans to credit-worthy borrowers on reasonable terms,” said Dodd. “If they do not, then in my view they are acting outside the clear intent of the statute and should reform their actions immediately,” he concluded.
Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd (D-Conn.) voiced his concerns over how the money for the $700 billion Emergency Economic Stabilization Act (EESA) was being used.
"The acceptance of public funding carries with it a public obligation," said Dodd. "One cannot benefit from taxpayer support in all its many forms and assume that one has no duty to serve that same taxpayer."
Dodd expected lenders who received some of the $700 billion to preserve homeownership. “The foreclosure crisis is the root cause of the larger financial crisis...Until we solve the foreclosure problem, we will not have any hope of solving larger economic problems.”
The Senator was critical of lenders who had received public funds and used the money to buy other financial firms or give their executives benefits rather than give out loans. “Credit is the lifeblood of the economy...Lenders have a duty to use these funds to make affordable loans to credit-worthy borrowers on reasonable terms,” said Dodd. “If they do not, then in my view they are acting outside the clear intent of the statute and should reform their actions immediately,” he concluded.
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