New Report Exposes Multi-Billion Dollar Handout for Corporate Homebuilders Who Helped Cause the Housing Crash and Mortgage Crisis; Under the Foreclosure Prevention Act, Taxpayers Will Pay as Much as $33 Billion to Reward Those at Fault
This revealing report should have you up in arms contacting ALL of your representatives!!!
Washington,
DC - "Corporate homebuilders – including
those responsible for the mortgage and housing crisis –
would receive billions of dollars in tax breaks under a provision of the
Foreclosue
Prevention Act currently pending in Congress, according to a report
released today. The report, A Multi-Billion Dollar Bailout for Those
at Fault: Corporate Homebuilders, the Housing Crash and the Mortgage Crisis,
was released by LIUNA –
the Laborers’ International Union of North America – which represents workers in the construction
industry. Hundreds of thousands of construction workers have lost their jobs
due to the housing and mortgage crisis, including 232,000 jobs lost in 2007
alone. The Foreclosure
Prevention Act is being held up as a way to help struggling homeowners,
and LIUNA supports many provisions of the bill. But under the bill’s little publicized 'carry-back' provision builders would get billions in tax breaks.
The carry-back provision would allow homebuilders to apply losses from 2006
and 2007 as far back as five years against taxes paid on profits – a three-year extension of the current carry-back allowance – even though much of the builders'
profit came from their own subprime lending and speculative over-heating of the
market. According to the report, the 15 largest corporate homebuilders
would receive a third of the benefit of the carry-back provision. The
report notes that the largest homebuilders made $16 billion in profits
on $100 billion in revenues in 2006, much of it from a dramatic increase
in subprime and high-risk lending, and from feeding speculators. The
report also shows that the carry-back provision could further
decimate the housing market by providing an incentive for builders to dump
existing inventory at any price, knowing they could carry back the loss. 'This bill will force American taxpayers who
are already struggling with foreclosure, job loss and shrinking
retirement savings to pay again for homebuilders'
reckless and unethical behavior,' LIUNA
General President Terence M. O'Sullivan said. 'Corporate homebuilders are tone deaf to even ask for
it and Congress should not acquiesce to it. This bill needs to be fixed so it
does not cause further damage by rewarding those who helped cause the crisis
and who can well fend for themselves.' The
report outlines how corporate homebuilders steered more and more of their
customers to subprime and high-cost mortgages through their own mortgage
subsidiaries as the housing bubble grew. For example, subprime loans
through the nation's fifth-largest builder, Los
Angeles-based KB Home (KBH), increased 405 percent from 2005 to 2006.
At the nation's second-largest builder, Miami-based
Lennar (LEN), subprime loans increased 158 percent during the same time
period. As the builders pushed more risky mortgages, they also fed the
housing bubble with record housing starts absorbed by speculators. In major
markets such as Phoenix, Las
Vegas and Fort Lauderdale,
Source: Laborers' International Union of North
America (LIUNA)
Jacob Hay, 202-942-2285
jhay@liuna.org







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