This morning, Treasury Secretary Timothy  Geithner announced that he would be extending the Troubled Asset Relief  Program – or TARP – by 10 months. Geithner went on to say that the  new, scaled back program would be focused on getting loans to small  businesses, stopping foreclosures, and stimulating loans from the credit  market. The extended TARP is estimated to cost no over $500 billion. 
 
"History suggests that exiting prematurely  from policies designed to contain a financial crisis can significantly  prolong an economic downturn," Geithner wrote in a letter to congressional  leaders. "We must not waver in our resolve to ensure the stability  of the financial system and to support the nascent recovery that the  administration and the Congress have worked so hard to achieve."
 
Under the TARP law, the bailout program  would have expired at the end of December if Geithner had not decided  to extend it.
Geithner said that in the end he does  not expect to spend more than $550 billion and that $175 billion will  be repaid by the end of 2010.
His letter also includes a current accounting  of TARP: The government expects to lose $42 billion of the $364 billion  it disbursed in the 2009 fiscal year, which ended on Sept. 30.
 
While most observers had expected Geithner  to extend the bailout, Republicans have been calling for it to be shut  down and have filed legislation to end it.
