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  1. November 4 – 2008 United States presidential election: Democratic U.S. Senator Barack Obama is elected as the 44th president of the United States and U.S. Senator Joe Biden is elected the 47th vice president. Barack Obama becomes the first African-American president-elect.

    • How The Subprime Mortgage Crisis Caused The Recession
    • The Recession Underway
    • Efforts Towards Recovery
    • The Role of The Banks in A Sluggish Recovery
    • Why Not Let The Banks Go Bankrupt?
    • Why Didn't Obama Do More to End The Recession?
    • The Dangers of Derivatives
    • How The Bailout Affects You

    In November 2006, the Department of Housing and Urban Development warned that new home building permits were 26% lower than the year before. At this point, the mortgage crisis could have been prevented. But the Bush administration and the Federal Reserve did not realize how grave those early warning signs were. They ignored declines in the inverted...

    July 2008: The Recession Began

    The subprime crisis reached the entire economy by the third quarter of 2008 when GDP fell by 2.1%. But for early observers, the first clue was in October 2006. Orders for durable goods were lower than they had been in 2005, foreshadowing a decline in housing production.Those orders also measure the health of manufacturing orders, a key indicator in the direction of national GDP.

    August 2008: Fannie and Freddie Spiraled Downward

    Mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Macwere fully succumbing to the subprime crisis in the summer of 2008. The failure of the government-backed companies that insured mortgages signaled that the bottom was dropping out. The Bush administration announced plans to take over Freddie and Fannie in order to prevent a full collapse.

    September 2008: The Stock Market Crashed

    On Sept. 29, 2008, the stock market crashed. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 777.68 points in intra-day trading. Until 2018, it was the largest point drop in history.It plummeted because Congress rejected the bank bailout bill. Although a stock market crash can cause a recession, in this case, it had already begun. But the crash of 2008 made a bad situation much, much worse.

    October 2008: $700 Billion Bank Bailout Bill

    On Oct. 3, 2008, Congress established the Troubled Asset Relief Program, which allowed the U.S. Treasury to bail out troubled banks.The Treasury Secretary lent $115 billion to banks by purchasing preferred stock. It also increased the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation limit for bank deposits to $250,000 per account and allowed the FDIC to tap federal funds as needed through 2009. That allayed any fears that the agency itself might go bankrupt.

    February 2009: The $787 Billion Stimulus Package

    On Feb. 17, 2009, Congress passed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. The $787 billion economic stimulus plan ended the recession. It granted $212 billion in tax cuts and $575 billion in outlays, including $311 billion for new projects such as health care, education, and infrastructure initiatives. On Feb. 18, 2009, Obama announced a $75 billion plan to help stop foreclosures. The Homeowner Stability Initiative was designed to help 7 to 9 million homeowners before they got behind in t...

    March 2009: Making Home Affordable Launched

    Making Home Affordable was an initiative launched by the Obama Administration to help homeowners avoid foreclosure. The program generated more than 1.7 million loan modifications in its lifespan. The Homeowner Affordable Refinance Program (HARP) was one of its programs. It was designed to stimulate the housing market by allowing up to two million credit-worthy homeowners who were upside-down in their homes to refinance and take advantage of lower mortgage rates. But banks only selected the be...

    August 2009: Obama Asked Banks to Modify Loans

    By August, foreclosures kept mounting, dimming hopes of an economic recovery. Banks could have, but didn't, prevent foreclosures by modifying loans. That's because it would further hurt their bottom line. But record foreclosures (360,149 in July) only made things worse for them as well as American families. July's foreclosure rate was the highest since RealtyTrac, a real estate information firm, began keeping records in 2005. It was 32% higher than in 2008. Foreclosures continued rising as mo...

    October 2009: Banks Weren't Lending

    In October 2009, unemployment peaked at 10%, the worst level since the 1982 recession. Almost 6 million jobs were lost in the 12 months prior to that.Employers were adding temporary workers as they grew too wary of the economy to add full-time employees. But the fields of health care and education continued to expand. One reason the recovery was sluggish was that banks were not lending. Lending was down 15% from the nation's four biggest banks: Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, and...

    People are still angry about the $350 billion in taxpayer dollars that were used to bail out the banks.Many people feel that there was no oversight and that the banks just used the money for executive bonuses. In this case, people thought banks should not have been rescued for making bad decisions based on greed. The argument goes that, if we had j...

    President Obama was dealing with more than just the recession as he looked toward the midterm elections. He launched sorely needed but sharply criticized healthcare reform. He also supported the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform Act. That and new Federal Reserve regulations were designed to prevent another banking collapse. They also made banking much ...

    The cause of the meltdown was the deregulation of derivatives that was so complicated that even their originators didn't understand them. Banks became so quick to resell mortgages on the secondary market that they felt immune to the dangers of taking riskier and riskier mortgages. Other aggressive moves by banks to sell more collateralized debt obl...

    The Dodd-Frank Act stopped the bank credit panic, allowed LIBOR interest rates to return to normal, and made it possible for everyone to get loans.Without the credit market functioning, businesses were not able to get the capital they need to run their day-to-day business. Without the bill, it would have been impossible for people to get credit app...

    • Kimberly Amadeo
  2. Historical events from year 2008. Learn about 305 famous, scandalous and important events that happened in 2008 or search by date or keyword.

  3. 10: The 2008 Presidential Election. President-elect Barack Obama addresses supporters during a town hall style meeting at Indiana University. Obama will be the first black president in U.S. history. Scott Olson/Getty Images. Name a defining moment of the 2004 presid­ential elections.

  4. The 2008 United States presidential electionwas the 56th quadrennial presidential election, held on November 4, 2008. The Democraticticket of Barack Obama, the junior senatorfrom Illinois, and Joe Biden, the senior senatorfrom Delaware, defeated the Republicanticket of John McCain, the senior senatorfrom Arizona, and Sarah Palin, the governorof ...

    • Illinois
    • Democratic
    • Barack Obama
    • Joe Biden
  5. 4 days ago · American presidential election held on November 4, 2008, in which, after a campaign that lasted nearly two years, Americans elected Democrat Barack Obama their 44th president. The result was historic, as Obama, a first-term U.S. senator from Illinois, became, when he was inaugurated on January 20,

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  7. Feb 10, 2007 · Senator Obama announces his candidacy for President of the United States in Springfield, IL. Jared shares his memories from watching then-Senator Obama announce his candidacy. 2008 actually began in 2007! It began on Feb. 10, 2007 in Springfield when Obama declared his candidacy on a chilly day in front of a mass of people.