Why is the USA Government bailing out the banks from defaulting mortgages ?

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these banks knew these people couldn’t afford these houses if they looked at the price and the salaries of the people. Why is my tax dollars going to banks which are already rich ?

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9 Responses to Why is the USA Government bailing out the banks from defaulting mortgages ?

  1. MICHAEL D says:

    Good question, perhaps you should post this question to your Senators and Congress men/women. Our Government never really changes things, they are from the “band-aid” school, a lot of things are broken in our country, but they won’t rethink the answers to the questions. This is the fault of corrupt politicians and their corporate financers, “We the People” need to take a more active role in Government in order to change what is wrong with “Our” country.

  2. firewomen says:

    Is this bush’s idea of a great economy….isn’t that what he said…

  3. Daniel C says:

    Because big business and the current political regime are practically one and the same.

  4. sheklikak says:

    Remember the fall of Wall Street in 1929? Americans spent more money than they made. Just happened again in 2005. If you want to blame someone, blame the greedy California investors that come in, drive the housing market up, then bail leaving others to clean up the mess. In order for the average Joe to be able to afford a house, banks had to come up with “creative financing”. No interest loans, variable interest rates, affordable home loans with six figure balloon payments after thirty years, it goes on.

    They are designed to get folks into a home in the hopes that interest rates will continue to fall, home owner will be earning more money at time of refinance, or home owner’s credit will improve by time of refinance. Usually none of these things come to light, so home owner discovers he/she can no longer afford their house and it gets repossessed. Bank is now collecting houses they cannot sell, or they have to sell for pennies on the dollar. Many financial institutions are going belly up because of this. Stupid California Investors!!!

  5. Big Dave says:

    We are a nation of credit, and this situation is the result of such. The tax dollars that we are having spent are going toward this because the stock market would take a direct tumble, causing many who invest, via mutual funds or direct investment, to lose money. The housing market may never be the same after this, by that I mean additional legislation could regulate the way mortgage companies do business.

  6. Philip H says:

    Too easy!
    The recipients of the benefits are the BIG MONEY LENDERS .
    Those who bought the houses are better off anyway.
    If they didn’t get those mortgages, they would have been paying rent and loosing it ALL anyway.
    At worst, for them it is a wash.
    It is those who provided the mortgages to people who wouldn’t even qualify for a credit card that stand to loose, so they are the ones who will benefit from a bail-out.
    Do you think the government will allow BIG MONEY BANKERS to suffer?
    By the way, much of that money came from FOREIGN investors wanting to get higher interest from their investments than they could receive in their own countries. Wealthy Koreans were (are) BIG investors in the mortgage market.
    Are we bailing THEM out too?

  7. sudonym x says:

    To keep the banking system from total collapse. Without this bail out, the banks don’t have enough cash on hand to cover their deposits, and the banks will fail.

    We are in very serious trouble.

  8. patriotwww says:

    It is no longer the American Dream, but the Bankers Dream. They win either way. Kinda like a CEO that fails and yet gets a muti million dollar bail out!

  9. booman says:

    It’s not just the US government. Financail entities in Europe have pumped billions into the market to prevent a huge credit crunch. This was brought about by the defaulting of many of the sub-prime mortgage loans in the US. The world economy is in a precarious position at this point and needs an influx of cash to prevent a potential collapse .

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