There’s already a move to extend the housing tax credit
Published: June 13, 2009
WASHINGTON Because first-time buyers are getting thousands of dollars in tax credits from the federal government to stimulate the economy, why shouldn't all homebuyers get equal treatment? And what about refinancers -- couldn't they make good use of a tax credit to help defray closing costs and loan fees?
Whatever your thoughts on these questions, there is an effort getting under way in Congress to extend tax credits to anyone who buys a new or existing home in the coming year, with no income limitations. In one case, legislation would even create a new "temporary" $3,000 tax credit to help defray the costs of refinancing mortgages on principal residences.
Two Dallas-area congressmen -- one a Democrat, the other a Republican -- have introduced bills that not only would broaden the reach of the current housing tax credits to almost everybody but also would keep the program going until either mid-2010 or the end of that year. The current credit expires Nov. 30.
Rep. Kenny Marchant, a Republican who represents the suburbs between Fort Worth and Dallas, is pushing a bill that would expand the current $8,000 federal credit to buyers of all houses -- not just first-timers -- through June 2010. The bill (H.R. 2619) would also create an unprecedented $3,000 credit to help offset "qualified refinancing costs" -- closing fees, lender charges and the like -- through next June. In a statement, Marchant said his goals are to "jump-start new sales," "reduce the housing inventory" and "stabilize housing prices."
As to the refinancing credit, he said the idea is to encourage owners "to take advantage of current low mortgage rates" -- cutting their monthly payments to stay out of financial trouble. The $3,000 refi credit could be used to pay for loan "points," other fees, or to "put equity in their home if they're a little underwater."
Marchant's House colleague, Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson, a Democrat who represents downtown Dallas, has introduced the Home Buying Credit Expansion Act (H.R. 2606), which would extend the current credit through Dec. 31, 2010. The bill would also open the credit to all buyers of principal residences, but would not provide any new tax incentives to stimulate refinancings.
The near-simultaneous introduction of tax credit expansion bills on Capitol Hill appeared to put the two most potent housing lobbies -- the National Association of Realtors and the National Association of Home Builders -- into a political quandary. On the one hand, any broadening of tax incentives for homebuying would be good news for their builder and realty broker members.
On the other hand, any public perception that the expiration date for the current credit might be extended could cause some potential buyers to delay purchases.
And if all would-be buyers might be eligible for some future federal tax credit -- not just first-timers -- large numbers of consumers might just stay on the sidelines waiting for that better deal to come out of Congress.
A spokesman for the National Asso ciation of Home Builders said the group "does not want anything that would stop the traction the current [tax] credit is now getting. We think it would be more appropriate to address [an extension or other changes] closer to the credit deadline" in the months ahead.
But Mary Trupo, public policy director for the National Association of Realtors, said her 1.1 million-member group sees it differently.
"We say -- if [the credit] is working for first-time homebuyers, then why not for all buyers, with no income limitations? We would like to see the expiration date extended [beyond Nov. 30]. Expanding the credit is really the way to stabilize the [housing] market -- by making it available to everybody."
Trupo said first-time buyers accounted for one-half of all purchasers in March -- up from one-third in January -- and that increase is directly attributable to the tax credit.
The association has no hard estimate of what effect opening up the credit to all buyers would have on total sales. But Jed Smith, managing director for quantitative research, said earlier projections about the first-time buyer credit ranged into the hundreds of thousands of additional sales. Broadening the credit to all buyers would almost certainly push the total higher.
Where's this all headed? Don't look for any immediate action on Capitol Hill. The legislative calendar is jammed already, the budget deficit is at all-time levels, the summer recess looms, and neither of the tax credit bill sponsors sits on the Ways and Means Committee, which must originate all tax legislation.
But later this year, you can bank on it: There will be a significant push to extend the housing tax credit -- and maybe even open it up to everybody.
Write to Kenneth R. Harney at the Washington Post Writers Group, 1150 15th St. NW, Washington, DC 20071, or e-mail
. Harney heads his own consulting firm in Chevy Chase, Md.
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Reader Reactions
Are Fannie mae and Freddie Mac-back?
When is getting to keep the money you earn putting a burden on your children?
The burden on our children are under is the wasteful entitlement programs the feds have created. Now as to the housing tax credit, do you know how much taxes are generated in the construction of a new home. Freedom: People keeping the money they earn, which stimulates the economy taking people off unemployment roles (saving gov’t dollars) and putting them to work (generating tax dollars). The tax credit alone is offset by the decrease in unemployment costs. The taxes generated from the construction of the homes will decrease the deficit, not increase it, or it might decrease the rate of increase of the deficit.
US Citizens deciding how to spend their money instead of the Gov’t wins every time. The Deficit is caused by wild government spending of our money and our children’s money. Tax credits just let us keep our money. Tax less spend less! Years of liberal brainwashing is leading people to believe a tax credit (essentially a tax cut) is the reason for the deficit. The truth is the Gov’t spends 80% too much.
And where’s the money for this latest giveaway going to come from?
From our enslaved children and grandchildren, of course. They’re going to be so very happy with us when we’re old.
I always get nervous when a story begins “Two congressmen introduce a bill ..“, especially when they represent neighboring districts.
With the government drowning in red ink its time to end these gimcrack subsidies that lead nowhere.
Does it occur to these politicians that when the tax credit is inevitably withdrawn that housing prices will fall by an amount equal to the tax credit.
Trying to entice people to buy homes they don’t really need is just more of the same malinvestment that brought on this economic maelstrom.
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