Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Republicans Pushing To Count GSE Debt Toward Statutory Debt Limit May Be Surprised To Find Real Debt-To-GDP Ratio Is 130%, And That Greece Is Amateur Hour

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Tyler Durden

A new proposal by House Republicans, lead by Rep. Scott Garrett (R., N.J.), is seeking to address changes to Fannie and Freddie accounting, along the lines of what has been previously proposed by Zero Hedge, and to not only include the GSE's losses as part of the Federal budget, but to also count the debt from the two mortgage zombies toward the nation's total statutory debt limit. As we stated previously, it is only semantics at this point which distinguish the GSE obligations from other Treasury obligations. Yet it is not just us, but the administration's very own Peter Orzsag who was pushing for consolidated GSE accounting two years ago. Yet with GSE debt most recently at $6.3 trillion, or about half of the existing Treasury debt, this would mean total US debt would not only explode by 50% overnight, but the recently  increased debt ceiling would be immediately breached and America would find itself in technical default (where it really is right now for all technical purposes).

Dow Jones has more:

A memo written by Garrett's office, which was released Monday, states that "now that the federal government has explicitly backed the operations of the GSEs, there should no longer be a distinction between their debt ... and the debt issued by the Department of the Treasury."

The proposed legislation highlights the current uncertainty surrounding the two firms, which have been under government control since September 2008. Federal officials were expected to provide some guidance as to their future plans for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in the fiscal 2011 budget released earlier this month, but that information wasn't included.

The Office of Management and Budget, which compiles the White House's annual budget request, did acknowledge in the budget the different ways the government currently accounts for the two firms. The Congressional Budget Office accounts for the two firms "on budget," treating them like any other federal agency. OMB, meanwhile, treats them "off budget," considering them to be private companies.

Republicans Pushing To Count GSE Debt Toward Statutory Debt Limit May Be Surprised To Find Real Debt-To-GDP Ratio Is 130%, And That Greece Is Amateur Hour

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