Readers of Thomas Sowell’s Housing Boom and Bust are likely to cringe when they read the opening of this Bloomberg Businessweek article:
Lawmakers began 2011 with sweeping ambitions to shrink the U.S. government’s involvement in mortgage finance. They ended the year enacting policies that increase it. An 11th-hour extension of the payroll tax cut, signed into law on Dec. 23, will for the first time divert funds from Fannie Mae (FNMA) and Freddie Mac (FMCC), the two mortgage finance companies under U.S. conservatorship, to pay for general government expenses. Congress also took steps that are likely to increase the role of the Federal Housing Administration in the market—at the same time that the agency’s reserves hit a record low. And some economists are charging that the FHA’s finances are even worse than they appear.
Perhaps it’s a good time to revisit the words of another Thomas — Thomas Woods — on the government’s role in creating our current economic malaise.