For
Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
February 13, 2008
Fact Sheet: Bipartisan Growth Package
Will Help Protect Our Nation's Economic
Health
President Bush Signs Bipartisan
Economic Growth Package Into Law To
Provide A Booster Shot For Our Economy
By Putting Money Back In The Hands Of
American Workers And Businesses
Today, President Bush signed
H.R. 5140, the Economic Stimulus Act of
2008. The U.S. economy is
structurally sound for the long term,
but growth has slowed. To address
short-term economic uncertainties, the
President last month called on Congress
to pass an economic growth package that
is robust, temporary, and puts money
back into the hands of American workers
and businesses. The President thanks
members of both parties for passing good
legislation that meets these criteria.
The bill the President signed today:
- Is large enough to have an
impact, amounting to more than
$152 billion this year, or about one
percent of GDP.
- Provides tax rebates to 128
million American households.
- Provides temporary tax
incentives for businesses to
invest in their companies and create
jobs this year.
The Growth Package The
President Signed Into Law Today Will
Protect The Health Of Our Economy By
Putting Money Back Into The Hands Of
American Workers And Businesses
The Economic Stimulus Act
will allow Americans to keep more of
their money to stimulate consumer
spending. The growth plan
provides rebates to 128 million American
households. Payments will go out through
late spring and summer so we can get
help to our economy when it is needed
most. Under the legislation:
- Individuals and families
are eligible to receive up to $600
for individuals and $1,200 for
couples. A minimum of $300
per person and $600 per couple would
be available to those with at least
$3,000 of earned income. This relief
would be available to everyone with
adjusted gross income less than
$75,000 for singles and $150,000 for
married couples filing jointly. It
will be phased out for taxpayers
above those income thresholds.
Taxpayers may qualify by filing a
tax return for 2007 and including a
valid Social Security number on
their tax return.
- Everyone eligible for
this relief would also receive an
additional $300 per child.
For example, this would mean up to
$1,800 of tax relief for an eligible
couple with two children.

- Recipients of Social
Security and certain veterans'
benefits are also eligible for
rebates. Those who receive
at least $3,000 from any combination
of benefits from these programs will
receive rebates. The IRS and
Treasury Department will be working
closely with the Department of
Veterans Affairs and the Social
Security Administration, along with
beneficiary organizations, to ensure
that all eligible individuals are
able to receive their payments.
This legislation also offers
incentives to spur business investment.
The legislation would save
businesses approximately $50 billion in
near-term taxes through a temporary
change to the tax code that will allow
American businesses that buy new
equipment this year to deduct an
additional 50 percent of the cost of
their investment in 2008. This will
encourage businesses to expand and
create new jobs now because buying
equipment, software, and tangible
property this year will dramatically
lower their taxes.
- The legislation also
increases expensing for small
businesses. This means that
a business placing less than
$800,000 of equipment into service
this year would be able to
immediately deduct up to $250,000
up from $128,000 of its investment
in 2008.
To Help Struggling
Homeowners, The Administration Has Also
Taken Important Steps To Shore Up The
Housing Sector
Yesterday, the new Project
Lifeline initiative was announced, which
will help more Americans keep their
homes by giving HOPE
NOW servicers a new tool to reach out to
seriously delinquent homeowners.
Project Lifeline offers, where
appropriate, to "pause" the foreclosure
process for 30 days while other
longer-term solutions are explored.
Secretaries Paulson and
Jackson facilitated the private-sector
HOPE NOW Alliance, which has developed
multiple strategies to help distressed
homeowners. HOPE NOW is a
cooperative effort among mortgage
counselors, servicers, investors, and
lenders to maximize outreach efforts to
struggling homeowners in distress and to
help homeowners refinance into a new
mortgage or receive a modification. HOPE
NOW membership now covers over 90
percent of the subprime mortgage market.
There is more work to do, and
HOPE NOW will continue to add new
resources to help homeowners, but a lot
of progress has been made since the
formation of HOPE NOW just over four
months ago:
- In
December, HOPE NOW members agreed on
a set of industry-wide standards to
bring systematic help to homeowners
who may not be able to make higher
mortgage payments after their
subprime loan interest rate resets.
HOPE
NOW estimates that more than a
million American homeowners could be
eligible for this plans assistance.
- In its first three months of
existence, HOPE NOW servicers sent
775,000 letters to at-risk
homeowners. Homeowners who had
previously avoided contact are now
calling for help, and more than
200,000 additional letters are being
sent every month.
- All HOPE NOW servicers are
contacting subprime borrowers 120
days before their interest rate
resets.
- The nationwide hotline
(888-995-HOPE) has been publicized
and expanded. Daily call volume has
increased to more than 4,000 calls a
day.
- Servicers and investors are now
providing funds for counseling;
previously, funding was provided
primarily by government and
foundations.
- In the second half of 2007, HOPE
NOW data shows the industry assisted
an estimated 869,000 homeowners, and
concurrent with the formation of
HOPE NOW, the loan modification rate
in the fourth quarter doubled over
the rate in the third quarter.
In August,
the President and his Administration
launched a new initiative at the Federal
Housing Administration (FHA) called
FHASecure.
FHASecure expands the FHA's
ability to offer refinancing by giving
it the flexibility to work with
homeowners who have good credit
histories but cannot afford their
current payments. Just last week,
HUD started sending out letters to more
than 850,000 targeted homeowners, urging
them to consider refinancing high cost
subprime loans with FHA. Since
FHASecure was announced, the
program
has received more than 200,000
applications and helped more than 90,000
families refinance their homes. Many
more of these pending applications will
be approved in the coming months, and
FHA expects this program to help more
than 300,000 families in total by the
end of the year.
In December, President Bush
signed the Mortgage Forgiveness Debt
Relief Act of 2007, which will help
Americans avoid foreclosure by
protecting families from higher taxes
when they refinance their home
mortgages. This Act created a
three-year window for homeowners to
refinance their mortgage and pay no
Federal taxes on any debt forgiveness
they receive.
President Bush Continues
To Call On Congress To Pass Much-Needed
Housing Legislation
The
President has called on Congress since
August to complete work on responsible
legislation modernizing the Federal
Housing Administration (FHA).
This bill will give FHA the necessary
flexibility to help hundreds of
thousands of additional families qualify
for prime-rate financing.
Congress
needs to pass legislation permitting
State housing agencies to help troubled
borrowers by issuing tax-exempt bonds
for refinancing existing home loans.
Under
current law, housing agencies can issue
tax-exempt bonds to finance new
mortgages for first-time homebuyers, but
States are unable to do the same for
homeowners seeking to refinance. This
legislation would also temporarily raise
the issuance cap on mortgage revenue
bonds.
Congress
needs to pass legislation to reform the
regulation of Government Sponsored
Enterprises (GSEs) like Freddie Mac and
Fannie Mae.
GSEs
provide liquidity to the mortgage market
that benefits millions of homeowners,
and it is vital that they operate safely
and soundly. The President has called on
Congress to pass legislation that
strengthens independent regulation of
the GSEs and ensures they focus on their
important housing mission.
The
President strongly believes that
government assistance must be
responsible the wrong answer, such as
a bailout for speculators and
unscrupulous lenders, could actually
prolong or worsen the problem.
To Ensure The Economy
Continues To Grow Over The Long Term, We
Must Continue To Pursue Pro-Growth
Policies Like Keeping Taxes Low And
Opening New Markets For American Exports
President Bush believes the
most important action to ensure the
long-term health of our economy is to
make sure the tax relief that is now in
place is made permanent. The
2001 and 2003 tax cuts are set to expire
in less than three years. If Congress
allows that to happen, 116 million
taxpayers will see their taxes go up by
$1,800 on average, and we will see an
end to many of the measures that have
helped our economy grow including the
10 percent individual income tax
bracket, reductions in the marriage
penalty, the expansion of the child tax
credit, and reduced rates on regular
income, capital gains, and dividends.
President Bush calls on
Congress to open markets for American
workers and entrepreneurs by approving
free trade agreements with Colombia,
Panama, and South Korea. Open
markets contribute to America's
prosperity exports now account for a
larger percentage of our GDP than at any
other time in our history, meaning that
trade is supporting economic growth. To
help workers directly displaced by trade
adjust to changes in our dynamic
economy, Congress should also
reauthorize and reform the Trade
Adjustment Assistance program.