WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. Federal Housing Administration will raise fees and implement other “aggressive measures” so it may not need taxpayer money to cover a projected deficit for the first time in the agency’s nearly 80-year history.

The mortgage insurer could avoid drawing funds from the U.S. Treasury even if President Barack Obama’s budget blueprint due out next month projects the FHA being overwhelmed with losses and short on capital, FHA Commissioner Carol Galante said in remarks prepared for a congressional hearing on Wednesday.

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