Isakson Back with Home Buyer Tax Credit Bump
Senator Johnny Isakson hasn’t given up on an expanded tax credit for home buyers as a way to juice up economic recovery.
The Georgia Republican shepherded a similar initiative through Senate approval in February, only to meet an untimely demise in the stimulus reconciliation bill eventually signed into law in mid-February as the $787 billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 .
Well, now a measure looking eerily akin to a demand-stimulus plan proferred last fall by the Fix Housing First Coalition of organizations including builders, real estate agents and brokers, building material suppliers, home inspectors, and home owners associations is making its way through committee as S 1230. The long and short of it is that it would up the current $8,000 credit to a maximum of $15K, open the deal to all home buyers (not just first-time buyers with a ceiling on incomes), extend the deadline for another year, and maintain historically low mortgage interest rates for that same time period.
Here’s Isakson’s take on the measure.
Johnny Isakson, D-Ga.
“The first-time homebuyer tax credit has made a difference. First-time home buyers used it and the market stabilized, but we don’t have a recession in first-time home buyers. We have a recession in the move-up market,”Isakson said. “One of the biggest problems facing the American people today is an illiquid housing market, a decline in their equity, a decline in their net worth and a depression in the housing market that we are obligated to correct if we possibly can.”
Isakson has some pretty high voltage backing on this one. A group, formed in April, called the Business Roundtable Housing Working Group, consisting of the CEOs of $5 trillion worth of U.S. corporations with almost 10 million employees is wholly behind Isakson and a bi-partisan support group in Senate.
Here’s a link to the Business Roundtable.
Problem is the House of Representatives, where elected officials thought the Fix Housing First measure and its benefits smacked of a bailout for builders, the ones many voters thought caused the financial crisis in the first place.
One way or another, the Obama Administration and House chief Nancy Pelosi are going to have to get behind the plan for it to go anywhere.
Still, you got to hand it to Johnny Isakson to keep carrying the torch for a “housing-will-be-the-engine-of-recovery” plan. At a time broad economic signals seem to be short-circuiting and mixed, and the best hope now is for an anemic bounce back, a housing-led rebound sounds about as dreamy as anything.
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