Barney Frank’s Opposition: It’s Not Hank Paulson

Paul Krugman blogged

the mortgage-freeze plan on Friday; today he has a column

on the subject in the NYT. What’s interesting to me is that the column is so

much more partisan than the blog entry was.

Krugman’s take on the economics of the plan is characteristically spot-on:

he’s quite right that it will be only of limited help. But I part with Krugman

when, in the newspaper, he insists on viewing that fact through a very political

lens:

The Paulson plan is probably an attempt to take the wind out of Barney Frank’s

sails. Mr. Frank, the Democratic chairman of the House Financial Services

Committee, has sponsored legislation that would give judges in bankruptcy

cases the ability to rewrite mortgage loan terms. But “Bankers Hope

Bush Subprime Plan Will Scuttle House Bill,” as a headline in CongressDaily

put it…

Mr. Paulson’s plan — or, to use its official name, the Hope Now

Alliance plan — is entirely focused on reducing investor losses. Any

minor relief it might provide to troubled borrowers is clearly incidental…

You might say that the Paulson plan is better than nothing. But the relevant

alternative isn’t nothing; it’s a plan that — like Barney

Frank’s proposal — would actually help working families. And that’s

what the administration is trying to avoid.

Krugman knows full well that the magnitude of the mortgage crisis is a function

of the amount that house prices rose during the housing bubble, and the amount

that house prices are likely to fall as they come back down to earth. With the

value of America’s residential housing stock somewhere in the region of $21

trillion, there’s really nothing that anybody on either side of the aisle

can do beyond tinkering at the edges and trying to dull some of the most excruciating

pain. Barney Frank’s proposal "would actually help working families"?

One or two, maybe – but only those families who filed for bankruptcy.

And I think that Krugman’s wrong when he says that the Paulson plan was deliberately

designed to be a more bank-friendly alternative to the Frank plan. Here’s what

President Bush said when he announced the plan:

These measures will help many struggling homeowners — and the United States

Congress has the potential to help even more. Yet in the three months since

I made my proposals, the Congress has not sent me a single bill to help homeowners.

If members are serious about responding to the challenges in the housing market,

they can start with the following steps.

First, Congress needs to pass legislation to modernize the FHA… Last year,

the House passed the bill with more than 400 votes — and this year, the House

passed it again. Yet the Senate has not acted…

Second, Congress needs to temporarily reform the tax code to help homeowners

refinance during this time of housing market stress… The House agrees, and

recently passed this relief with bipartisan support. Yet the Senate has not

responded…

Third, Congress needs to pass funding to support mortgage counseling…

Fourth, Congress needs to pass legislation to reform Government Sponsored

Enterprises like Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae… The GSE reform bill passed

by the House earlier this year is a good start. But the Senate has not acted.

Notice a pattern here? Bush lauds the measures passed by the House

– ie, Barney Frank. And he’s complaining that Frank’s helpfulness is being

held up in the Senate, where Chris Dodd is too busy running for president to

actually pass these bills. If you read Damian

Paletta’s piece on Frank in the WSJ today, you’ll find no hint of opposition

from the White House. If Krugman were to be fair about the reason Frank’s initiatives

aren’t making it into law, he point more fingers at Dodd than at Paulson.

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