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Housing, a forgotten issue in US elections, still vexes economy

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“The big part still missing is principal reduction” on the mortgage, said Calhoun, whose group has advocated more aggressive debt forgiveness.

Instead of initially pursuing principal reduction, Obama launched voluntary programs that provided financial incentives for mortgage servicers — who collect payments on behalf of the investors who own mortgages — to modify troubled mortgages. The administration hoped to modify up to 4 million mortgages, a goal that’s fallen short at around 1 million permanent modifications to date.

The number looks better when servicers’ own modifications are counted. Many servicers didn’t participate fully in the government programs but designed their own. Since September 2009, servicers have approved 2.6 million permanent mortgage modifications outside the government programs.

If mortgage modifications haven’t completely lived up to hopes, the Home Affordable Refinance Program gets higher marks. It involves allowing underwater homeowners to refinance, with the new mortgages purchased by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, the mortgage finance titans that the government took over in the summer of 2008. More than 1.6 million homeowners have been able to refinance under the program since April 2009, more than 600,000 of them this year alone.

“I think it’s fantastic. When I look at the national numbers and see 600,000 who otherwise wouldn’t have (been able to refinance) … that is helpful,” said Faith Schwartz, the executive director of the HOPE NOW alliance.

HOPE NOW is a private-sector response to the housing crisis, created at the end of the George W. Bush administration. With the benefit of having tried to fix housing in two administrations, Schwartz gives Obama praise for some efforts, criticism for others.

Schwartz praises efforts by the Federal Housing Administration, the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve to provide liquidity in the housing market. That’s a fancy way of saying they’ve kept money flowing into an impaired housing sector.

“I’m pretty thankful for the FHA. … Private markets won’t provide that today,” she said.

But Schwartz agrees with GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney’s call for a clear plan to get Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which had operated as private companies, out of government conservatorship. The Obama administration released a plan in February 2011 for reducing their footprint but it amounted to discussing broad choices without advocating any one path.

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