From Google  News:
It sounded like a great idea three months  ago: Hand homeowners a $6,500 tax credit to find a new place to live,  giving a thrust of energy to the housing market's recovery.
 
So far, people are staying put.
 
In November, the federal government extended  a tax credit of up to $8,000 for people who hadn't owned a home for  three years. This credit had helped boost home sales last summer and  fall. Seeking to build on that momentum, the government added a new  credit of up to $6,500 for current homeowners, hoping it would transform  them into house-hunters this winter and spring.
But real estate agents around the country  say the credit is doing little to elevate sales. Reasons vary.
 
The unemployment rate is still near 10  percent and consumer confidence is falling. Home prices have stabilized  in some markets, but are still a third below their 2006 peak. Droves  of people who want to sell are stuck because their home is worth less  than they paid for it. Harsh winter weather has Americans shoveling  driveways instead of preparing their home for buyer visits.
 
"No one is saying, `I need to buy  something before it expires,'" said Tim Surratt, an agent with  Greenwood King Properties in Houston.