Source: Agencies |
2008-12-14 |
ONLINE EDITION
THE selection of Shaun Donovan as secretary of Housing and Urban Development puts the current New York City housing commissioner at the forefront of one of the more nettlesome economic challenges confronting the new administration -- the soaring foreclosures that are threatening homeownership nationwide.
In naming his choice for housing secretary, President-elect Barack Obama yesterday rounded out his economic team and gave new prominence to the mortgage crisis that has dragged the country into a recession.
The Federal Reserve estimates that lenders are on track to initiate 2.25 million foreclosures this year, more than doubling the annual pace before the crisis set in. What's more, falling housing values and a plunging stock market have contributed to US$2.8 trillion in lost household wealth in the third quarter.
Donovan joins a team led by Tim Geithner, Obama's nominee for Treasury secretary, and Larry Summers, who will chair Obama's National Economic Council. Obama has his team working on an ambitious economic recovery plan that includes saving or creating 2.5 million jobs over the next two years.
Stemming foreclosures and stabilizing the battered housing market will be daunting tasks that have already bedeviled Congress and the Bush administration.
"We need to approach the old challenge of affordable housing with new energy, new ideas, and a new, efficient style of leadership," Obama said upon naming Donovan during his yesterday's radio address. "We need to understand that the old ways of looking at our cities just won't do."
Donovan will inherit various tools to confront the problem. Obama wants to use the second half of a US$700 billion financial industry rescue plan to help stem foreclosures.
THE Illinois attorney general filed a motion with the state's highest court yesterday asking justices to remove from office Gov. Rod Blagojevich, accused of enriching himself by offering to sell Barack Obama's Senate...
