Posts Tagged ‘stimulus bill’

Homeowner Tax Credit Stimulus Bill

Question: Stimulus Bill for New Homeowners…….?

So since the $15,000.00 tax credit to new homeowners has been dropped, are they planning on replacing it with something else other than the $7500.00 no interest loan???

Answer: They replaced it with 8000 dollar tax credit and extended it to Aug. 31st. That is a no pay back credit the initial one in 08 is an interest free pay back loan.

Obama Says Economic Progress ‘Painfully Slow’

President Barack Obama insisted Friday that the U.S. economy is showing improvement from the deepest recession in decades but conceded the “progress has been painfully slow.” He said he understands that many voters in November’s elections may blame the weak recovery on him. “For all the progress we’ve made, we’re not there yet. And that means people are frustrated and why people are angry,” he …

Agreement reached on stimulus bill


Housing Tax Credit Stimulus Bill

Housing Tax Credit Stimulus Bill

Question: Stimulus eligibility for new home buyer?

I recently bought a house in July of 2008, and I understand that Bush passed a law that gave a $7500 tax credit/loan to new home buyers. The loan would be repaid over 15 years and it would come out of your taxes. With Obama’s new stimulus, I’m confused on if that affects me at all. I know that the new housing deal is if you buy a home between January 2009 – December 2009, but I’ve read that this stimulus may also affect the previous housing bill? Can anyone clear this up for me?

Thanks!

Answer: I do think this will be signed as is:

Temporary credit for home buyers: The bill increases the size of an existing temporary and refundable first-time home buyer credit to $8,000, up from $7,500. It also removes the requirement under current law that the credit be paid back if the buyer stays in the home for at least three years. And it would extend the credit’s expiration date to Dec. 1, 2009, from July 1. Those eligible for this credit must have purchased a home after Jan. 1, 2009, and before Dec. 1, 2009.

It will not affect anyone buying in 2008.

Economic collapse: Don’t blame the free market

A more realistic view is that a housing boom and bust happened to strike a fragile financial system whose fragility was worsened by ill-conceived government interventions.

Republican hypocrisy exposed: top GOP lawmakers take credit for stimulus bill passage


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