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Lindsey on stimulus, Bernanke July 9: Former White House economic adviser Lawrence Lindsey discusses a second stimulus plan, Fed chief Bernanke and the autos industry on CNBC. CNBC |
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Jobs, spending data hint at recovery In a hopeful sign for the economy, the number of newly laid-off workers filing claims for unemployment benefits fell below 500,000 last week for the first time since January. |
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Checking Market's Pulse Reviewing the market session, with David Darst, Morgan Stanley Smith Barney; Mike Koskuba, Victory Capital Management; and CNBC's Simon Hobbs. |
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WASHINGTON - The government has tens of billions of dollars left in the eye-popping $700 billion bank bailout fund created last fall, prompting a debate in Congress over what to do with it.
The Treasury Department wants to keep the money at its disposal in case the economy gets worse. But fiscal conservatives like Sen. Judd Gregg of New Hampshire and Rep. Spencer Bachus of Alabama want the money kept to pay down the national debt.
Meanwhile, a group of liberal Democrats led by Massachusetts Rep. Barney Frank, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, say at least a portion of it should be spent to keep cash-strapped homeowners.
“We clearly face a new wave of foreclosures” because of rising unemployment, Frank said at a hearing Thursday.
The question of what to do with the money will grow more pressing in coming months as Congress takes a step back to consider the fate of the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP.
Lawmakers had rushed to approve the money in October 2008 as Wall Street sat on the brink of collapse. Since then, even as the economy continues to wobble and high unemployment threatens the prospects for a speedy recovery, major banks have repaid $70 billion in assistance and expressed growing optimism about their ability to function without government assistance.
TARP is set to conclude at the end of the year unless Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner extends it through fall 2010.
The Government Accountability Office, the nonpartisan investigative arm of Congress, estimated on Thursday that the government has about $328 billion left in the fund that hasn’t been spent or legally committed.
According to GAO, the government has disbursed approximately $339 billion and promised $102 billion more. That leaves some $259 in the fund plus the $70 billion banks have repaid.
The Treasury Department says it already has plans for some of the remaining money and predicts the available funding in TARP will be much lower, about $127 billion.
Geithner also has indicated he wants any extra money in the program left to his disposal if it’s needed. In a letter to Gregg, the secretary said any additional “headroom” under the program’s $700 billion cap provides “additional flexibility to Treasury in its efforts to stabilize the economy and build the foundation for long-term economic growth.”
But for many lawmakers, money already approved by Congress to aid the economy is ripe for the picking. Frank wants to use dividends earned through government-owned stock in ailing banks to go toward affordable housing programs.
Republicans on the House Financial Services Committee disagree.
“We need to end the bailouts and return that money to the taxpayer,” said Bachus, R-Ala.
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