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Tax Payer Bailout Could Cost 25 Billion?

NYT-The proposed government rescue of the nation’s two mortgage finance giants will appear on the federal budget as a $25 billion cost to taxpayers, the independent Congressional Budget Office said on Tuesday even though officials conceded that there was no way of really knowing what, if anything, a bailout would cost.

The budget office said there was a better than even chance that the rescue package would not be needed before the end of 2009 and would not cost taxpayers any money. But the office also estimated a 5 percent chance that the mortgage companies, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, could lose $100 billion, which would cost taxpayers far more than $25 billion.

The House is expected to act this week on housing legislation that includes the proposed rescue plan. Legislative language has not been finalized, but the Congressional Budget Office said its estimates were based on the plan by the Treasury Department and that it did not expect significant changes in the final bill.

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One Response to “Tax Payer Bailout Could Cost 25 Billion?”

  1. captain_menace Says:

    Ahhh!

    You naysayers!

    What’s a mere $25 billion when you’ve got a national debt approaching $10 trillion?

    I say “bring it on!”