OBG: The hidden mortgage tax that funded payroll tax cut: Almost nobody knows about it and nobody in Congress will claim credit or blame


The following is an “Oldie But Goodie” investigative report by Sharyl Attkisson from the archives originally dated February 2012. The link to the video is below.

Just before Christmas, American workers got a rare gift from Washington politicians – the current payroll tax cut would be extended for two more months

At the time, both President Barack Obama and House Speaker John Boehner lauded the move to avoid a tax increase for millions of working Americans.

But there’s something the politicians weren’t bragging about – the fact that they’re paying for the two-month tax cut with what has turned into a brand new fee on home buyers.

The new fee is a minimum of one-tenth of 1 percent on Fannie Mae- and Freddie Mac-backed loans, and is likely to go much higher.

It will be imposed for the next 10 years on most mortgages and refinancings and it lasts for the life of the loan.

For every $200,000, it amounts to an extra $15 dollars a month.

It’s bad news for Patty Anderson, who’s buying a home in Virginia.

Anderson will save a couple hundred dollars from having her payroll tax cut extended but her mortgage broker told her the new fee would cost her almost $9,500.

“I was absolutely startled that it would add up to that much,” she said.

The $35.7 billion collected in fees won’t go into the Social Security fund to replace the lost payroll tax. It goes to the general treasury where Congress can spend it however they please.

Bill Burnett, Anderson’s broker and president of the Virginia Association of Mortgage Brokers, said you won’t see Congress’ new charge in the paperwork, but it’s there.

“It’s actually built into this [interest] rate. You would never see the fee as a cost to you,” he said.

Burnett said the fee will affect a “very large number” of homeowners.

“Your pocketbook is being raided in order to pay for a tax policy issue decided at the last minute by probably people who didn’t understand fully what they were legislating on.”

CBS News went to Capitol Hill ask what Congress was thinking when they passed the mortgage fee hike. Boehner pointed the finger at the Senate. 

“As you’re well aware, this bill came over from the Senate. I don’t know how they justified it. We would rather have offset that two-month extension with reductions in spending,” he said.

But the Senate blamed the House. And Democrats and Republicans blamed each other.

One congressman, Florida Republican Allen West, said he tried to blow the whistle on the whole thing before Christmas.

“I read the legislation and raised the flag. Unfortunately nobody paid attention to what I was saying at the time,” he said, calling the fee a backdoor tax increase on the middle class.

“It absolutely is because you’re talking about the homeowners – when you’re talking about the people that are gonna be using the Fannie Mae, the Freddie Mac, the government-sponsored enterprises – it is absolutely a tax increase on them.”

An Obama administration official defended the mortgage fee, calling it “modest.” She said it’s “unlikely to negatively affect borrowers” because increases “will be phased in over the next two years.” And it will “help bring private capital back into the mortgage market, which [is] good for borrowers over the long term.”

Maybe so. But Patty Anderson only knows that for the next 30 years, she’ll be haunted by the Washington ghost of Christmas past. 

“I think it just looks like Washington grabbing more money,” she said.

Watch the video here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VRI8hsdDbzc


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3 thoughts on “OBG: The hidden mortgage tax that funded payroll tax cut: Almost nobody knows about it and nobody in Congress will claim credit or blame”

  1. This needs to be exposed to the pubic. I never knew this, perhaps I need to read my mortgage documents once again.

  2. Government: Robbing Peter to pay Paul as the old saying goes. Finger-pointing and kicking the can down the road is all they know. When someone raises an issue like Allen West did in 2012 they ignore them or worse tell the to “shut up and sit down”. Too many swamp creatures to count. The good ones are outnumbered so this election is critical to get more fiscal conservatives into office … and hold the ones there accountable.

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