This week’s proposals by the Obama
administration to deal with the persistent economic crisis will be, as
with previous plans that involved trillions of taxpayer dollars, little
more than salt in the wounds. Once again the strategy is to stimulate
the economy by funding projects and tax cuts while ignoring the root
cause of the problem: a housing foreclosure meltdown that has chilled
the spending of a majority of American consumers.
With 11 million homeowners underwater on
their mortgages and 3 million more already foreclosed, we have to
assume, given the average household size, that some 40 million Americans
are feeling mighty strapped. The numbers grow to an overwhelming
majority when you take into account the distress of all homeowners, who
have watched the value of the family nest egg dwindle even if they
substantially paid down or paid off their mortgage debt. And this very
widespread feeling of being suddenly much poorer is a nationwide scourge
that has dramatically cut the appetite for consumption that drives the
economy.