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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

Three Things That Won't Help End the Foreclosure Crisis

By Dean Baker and Liz Chimienti, Center for Economic and Policy Research. Posted May 15, 2008.


Falling home prices, rising foreclosures rates, and a slowing economy have created a perfect storm for U.S. homeowners.
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Falling home prices, rising foreclosures rates, and a slowing economy have created a perfect storm for homeowners who bought in bubble-inflated markets, or used subprime, adjustable-rate mortgages to purchase their homes.
Members of Congress have responded to the crisis facing their constituents by proposing various measures, some strong, like amending the bankruptcy law to cover primary residences, and some misguided. The following are three major proposals that would actually do more harm than good. As Congress seeks to pass legislation to stem the foreclosure crisis, legislation containing elements of these proposals should not be on the table.
1. Subsidies for Home Buyers
Homeownership can be a useful way for families to accumulate wealth and to provide good secure housing. However, if families are buying homes with bubble-inflated prices, then they are not likely to accumulate any wealth in their home, since the price is likely to fall back to its trend level before they sell their home. (The median period of homeownership for moderate-income families is just four years.) Furthermore, they are likely to pay far more in housing costs each year, than they would to rent a comparable unit.


In the case of moderate-income families facing serious budget constraints, the additional housing costs associated with owning an over-priced home are likely to come at the expense of other necessary items, such as health care and child care. It is difficult to see how the government will have helped a family by encouraging them to buy into such a situation.
Additional tax credits for home buyers in a bubble-inflated market can put more people at risk by encouraging them to buy an over-priced home that will fall in value. In addition, tax credits for the purchase of homes that are in the foreclosure process, but have not yet been returned to the lender, provide a perverse incentive to lenders to foreclose on current homeowners, since they increase the resale value of the house following a foreclosure.
2. Artificial Price Floors
This has nothing to do with linoleum, and everything to do with how prices get set for homes that are refinanced and backed by FHA loans as proposed in legislation being considered by Congress.
If home prices continue to decline, and the government issues guarantees of mortgages at prices that are near current levels, then the government is likely to face a substantial cost associated with a high default rate. The most important factor determining both the default rate and the cost of each default is the movement in house prices.
If prices continue to fall, then many homeowners will again find themselves owing more than the value of their home. This situation leads to defaults for two reasons. First, if a homeowner owes more than the value of her home, then she does not have the option to borrow against equity in order to make her mortgage payments. This eliminates an important source of security if job loss or unusual expenses leaves the homeowner temporarily unable to pay his or her bills.
The other reason why this situation increases default rates is that homeowners who owe more than the value of their home can effectively save themselves money by simply surrendering their house to the bank. If a homeowner owes $200,000 on a home that is currently worth $180,000, the homeowner can effectively save $20,000 by just giving the house back to the bank. While this move will hurt the homeowner's credit rating, if they don't have any special attachment to the house, a homeowner may choose this option.
In addition to increasing the number of defaults and foreclosures, falling house prices will also increase the loss on each foreclosure. If the house is still valued at close to the amount of the mortgage, then the losses on the foreclosure will just be the administrative and transactions costs associated with carrying through the foreclosure and reselling the house. However, if the house sells for less than the value of the mortgage, then this can be a substantial source of additional losses for the government.
The government can limit the risk that it will set the guarantee price on new mortgages too high by using an appraisal of rental price as the basis of the guarantee, rather than an appraisal of the sale price. Since rents never rose out of line with fundamentals, an appraisal based on some multiple of annual rent (e.g., 15 times annual rent) should ensure that the government's guarantee price is set at a level that is close to the price that the home will command after the bubble has deflated.
3. Incentives to Build More Homes
Not letting prices fall back to their equilibrium (see above), or giving generous tax credits to homebuilders will encourage them to build more homes. The more homes that get built, the greater the over supply. This will imply a longer adjustment process and a larger price decline. There is no public interest in taking any steps that can delay the process of price adjustment in the housing market. This process is very painful, but delaying it will only make it more painful.

More research and information on what Congress should do can be found here.


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See more stories tagged with: recession, lending crisis, housing crisis, bail-outs

Dean Baker is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research. Liz Chimienti is a domestic policy analyst with CEPR.

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Baker's ideas are sound. They will certainly help resolve the crisis in an equitable fashion
Posted by: yellow on May 15, 2008 9:00 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Government intervention must be employed in order to stop the housing crisis from taking the entire economy down. The approach must not be limited to bailing out investment banks and those holding high risk CDOs or helping only the most credit worthy homeowners stay in their homes. Many people are being chased out only to have their homes cleared from the market to others receiving improved terms the foreclosed upon owners should be offered. Many of these people were duped into thinking they only qualified for subprime mortgages and were offered "teaser" rates which reset to unmanagable levels. Further, many of these contracts contained early payment penalty clauses that made refinancing financially unviable. Mortgage lenders actually offered bonus incentives to their agents to get borrowers to accept the highest rates possible which is why so many who qualified for regular loans got the subprime contract. This must be rectified. Equity demands government help.

A price floor will help save the market and the financial system. It is not an unreasonable market distortion any more than is the current mess created by dubious and often illegal financial practices. The price floor is thus a just rectivication of past wrongs.

The government must get involved. It is only fair.

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THE OLD BUT TRUE FINANCIAL SAYING.....
Posted by: gellero1 on May 16, 2008 12:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
'" When there's Blood in the Streets................it's time to BUY ".

Lots or bargains out there for many folks.

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» BALONEY Posted by: johngary
» RE: BALONEY Posted by: opmoc
» There's another saying Posted by: ReallyBearish
Yet The Fed Keeps The Financials Afloat ...
Posted by: mmckinl on May 16, 2008 12:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The amount of cash exchanged for dubious collateral is still growing. It is now higher than ever. The required reserves shortage just for the member banks is well over 150 Billion. God knows what kind of shape the nonmember loan beneficiaries are in because the Fed doesn't . Yet the silence from the so called liberal economists is deafening.

Where is Baker's call to reign in the privately owned and operated Federal Reserve? Where is Baker's call to stop this tax payer bailout of the richest of the rich?

Any comment on either of these articles Mr Baker?

Did Bernanke lie in Congress?

The Secret Bailout of J. P. Morgan: How Insider Trading Looted Bear Stearns and the American Taxpayer

When will you stop playing cheeezy little game of hide the issues?

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So we managed to get a lot of new homes built?
Posted by: Sojourner on May 16, 2008 1:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It looks to me as though the only ones who made out like bandits with American housing are the developers and the builders--providing that they are not stuck, long term, with vacancies.

I don't feel much sorrow for the banks or the real estate investors, either. They sold people on the mistaken idea that they could be home owners while actually they were only paying what amounted to rent, since the foreclosures were just around the corner. So the lenders collected rents (disguised as mortgage payments) until the crash came.

Now all we have to figure out is where to find people who can afford to make mortgage payments on the McMansions--or even on the more modest homes in the rust belt or any place where work is scarce.

The only way to keep an empire is to use armed force to exploit the colonies. These days that means protecting access to raw materials. Instead of living simply, we are fighting over the soon-to-be last dead rat. Does it deserve to be called "an economy" if it is just a struggle to survive that keeps us busy?

It will take a magician to ease us through the pain. At the moment, it is the magician who seems to have disappeared. Some trick!

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Oh, this is a bad one - no mention of the $200 billion bailout for the investment banks?
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on May 16, 2008 1:07 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Instead, a call to let the homeowners take it on the nose for being unwise enough to get a subprime loan from their sharky broker.

What about the student loan crisis that is now looming, and to which I am contributing my fair share by refusing to pay a dime of my overpriced student loans, which were sold on several times to who knows who. Why not have the federal government write off all that debt and let college students today start life the way the baby boomers did - with a clean slate?

For a more telling article on who is really benefiting these days, see Bloomberg:

"Recovery From Worst Housing Slump Since 1930s Comes With Angel "

"May 15 (Bloomberg) -- The way out of the worst U.S. housing slump since the 1930s goes through Angel Gutierrez.

Gutierrez buys bad mortgages a dozen at a time for a fraction of their face value from lenders overwhelmed by the highest number of defaults in 23 years. When he goes door to door to negotiate lower payments for homeowners or pay them to move so he can sell the house, he's speeding up the recovery by establishing a price for the homes and flushing out the least reliable borrowers.

``You buy the mortgage for pennies on the dollar, carry the big stick, tell the homeowner how it's going to be, then double your money very easily,'' Gutierrez said."


See, it's just like Old Ireland, when the local British sherrif would come to drive out anyone who was late on their rent.

. . ."At this stage of the game they're playing a very small role, but I expect that that role will accelerate as more people are willing to accept reality,'' said Sam Zell, the billionaire real estate investor who's called "the grave dancer'' for buying distressed assets. "The single-family market has to be cleared. No market works unless it clears. If banks can't clear, they can't make new loans. Anything you do to keep people who can't afford it in their houses is another way of delaying the market clearing.''

Oh, but it's A-OK to fork $200 billion over to a fradulent and overextended financial system - whose CEOs all took home mega-million dollar bonuses this year?

That sure is an odd perspective.

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why buy a house???
Posted by: ellie on May 16, 2008 4:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
you find 'the house of your dreams', then comes the 30 year fixed rate if you are lucky... how many people anywhere in this country plan to live in that house for over 30 years...

houses fall apart at the worst times and you have to spend more money to fix them... how many people have 'purchased' a home and right after closing find 'surprises' the appraiser missed??? onto a second mortgage to put the damn thing back together to make it habitable, and no, not talking about upgrades, just the stuff like broken pipes, a roof leak suddenly appears, the electrician has to come in, the water heater takes a dive...

then there's property taxes, other taxes, municipal levees, etc that go on long past the 30 year mortgage...

so, the reality is that you never really 'own' your house or land, it's perpetual rental...

saner to rent forever then buy in the first place... find a landlord who has the 30 year fixed almost paid off, move in, be nice to them and stay put...

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Bobby Decker AKA THE ARTIST FORMERLY KNOWN AS THE PURPLERAIN MAN
Posted by: Bobby Decker on May 16, 2008 6:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
" $200.000 FOR A DOUBLE WIDE ON A DIRT ROAD IN BUM
FUCK FLORIDA!........ CAN YOU SAY?! IRATIONAL EXEURBENCE ON CRACK!...........I WONDER WHAT NEW PONZI SCHEME
THE BUSH CRIME FAMILY HAVE JUST AROUND THE CORNER FOR US....WAITING TO HIT WHEN GRANDPAW SIMPSONS IN THE WHITE HOUSE NEXT YEAR ! ?

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The Entire Financial System Has Descended into an Unregulated Casino Threatening Capitalism Itself
Posted by: opmoc on May 16, 2008 7:01 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This has been designed, implemented and encouraged by the most powerful forces right at the heart of Wall Street and London.

Everyone involved in any kind of investment has been positively encouraged to become leveraged up to the eyeballs taking on great exposure to potentially enormous levels of debt.

I personally know an ordinary individual with an ordinary job in computing who by taking leveraged gambles on equities went from a base of about $10,000 to over $2,000,000 very quickly.

But gambling is completely addictive - and of course he couldn't stop - and wanted even more - so not only lost the lot but went seriously negative and lost his home, wife and family.

He is just an example. Even the biggest bank in the World has been playing the same game - with the same results.

Without artificial support the entire banking system could totally collapse.

The basics of capitalism are sound. There is nothing wrong with taking on quite high levels of debt to do something like buy a house - providing your current and likely future earnings will allow you to easily pay back both the interest and the capital on the loan. It may take 25 years to do so - but that is not unreasonable.

There is also nothing wrong for companies to raise capital by issuing shares in their company. They employ people who create goods and services which get sold at a profit. Profit is not a dirty word but is ultimately essential for a company to remain in business. If the company goes bust, everyone loses their jobs and rather than contributing taxes - the former employees are sat at home on benefit.

But what we've got now isn't capitalism - its complete and utter out of control financial lunacy - that could bring down the entire system - such that everyone is sat at home doing nothing and starving to death.

The financial system is like a mirror of the lunacy happenning in government.

Its as if the most powerful forces in control of our entire economy are totally out of their heads on crack cocaine.

We've got a US President who seems quite capable of starting a Nuclear War by bombing Iran - at the same time as the entire financial system is being nuked from within.

The need to get sane people in control of Government and the entire Financial System is becoming extremely urgent - but the task is phenomenal.

Meanwhile the very rich become even richer and everyone else on the planet is screwed.

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Dishonest Mortgagers
Posted by: US Citizen on May 16, 2008 7:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It looks like there should be a lot of cheap housing out there for a long, long time. But everyone needs to remember that there are just as many crooks and dishonenst people in the mortgage broker and banking industry as before. One needs to go really low on their bids for another house, because chances are the house isn't anywhere near worth what the realty says it is worth. Also definitely do not go through the broker for your loan, but use an independent banker to get your loan. Shop around for the best fixed rate you can find.

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Inflation to the rescue
Posted by: NthnBrazil on May 16, 2008 8:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you managed to ignore the hard sell and bought a home in the last few years with a 30 year fixed rate mortgage and you can continue to make the payments, I wouldn't be overly concerned with all the talk of bubbles bursting and housing crisis. Long-term the value of the dollar will correct before housing drops more than 25%. It will be the the same way that your parents bought houses for $50K and their parenst bought houses for $6K, only much faster.

The bigger concern should be that we are headed towards a rapid and heavy devaluation of the dollar such that we have never seen in this country. Think hyper-inflation if you really want to get scared. Check this out from that wiki entry:

"In both classical economics and monetarism, (hyper-inlfation) is always the result of the monetary authority irresponsibly borrowing money to pay all its expenses"

"In neo-classical economic theory, hyperinflation is rooted in a deterioration of the monetary base, that is the confidence that there is a store of value which the currency will be able to command later. In this model, the perceived risk of holding currency rises dramatically, and sellers demand increasingly high premiums to accept the currency"


So economists can't agree on anything, but whichever school you follow, the US fits the description for the root causes of hyper-inflation. You're going to beg for Ron Paul's "closet racism" coupled with sane monetary policy when you're burning dollars to heat your living room.

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Easy Solution, No One's Listening
Posted by: Andie927 on May 16, 2008 8:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
STOP Foreclosures, at the most logical point, when all parties are present, when the lender takes it into Court! Instead of the Judge, rubberstamping it, send it to Arbitration, with Instructions. The house is appraised at 'current value', the owner is re-evaluated financially, and a new fixed rate mortage is made available, (either through the lender at 5% above Prime, or by the government)either way the lender accepts the loss, in exchange for 'good' paper,

If at point the owner still can't afford the payments, it goes into foreclosure, they never should have bought a house in the first place!

No one should be puying a home who can't afford to put 20% down, my personal rule of thumb, has always been that we could afford the payments on one income! Yes, we had to make do with less house may times then we wanted, but when life happened, we didn't lose it.

Governments job is to Regulate Corporations, to protect the people, who don't stand a chance against well financed, expensive legal teams that Corporations can afford, that you and I can't. Corporations have no values, or morals, all they care about is PROFIT!

The Mortage Lending, Speculation Industry came up with all these high profit, new fangled 'products', and suckered people into houses they couldn't afford. Now the Government through the Courts, should make the lenders (speculators) EAT the Loss! They weren't 'bitching' when they were making money hand over fist on the high fees, from originating these 'bad' loans.

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» Amen and Hallelujah Posted by: NthnBrazil
Simple Solution to Mortgage crisis and sub primes..especially..
Posted by: TJ-stars4peace on May 16, 2008 10:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just set these Mortgages the Sub Primes especially at 3% above the fed Rate or Prime rate even if need be to satisfy our greed ridden loan shark fascist bankers such as David Rockefeller and his fascist Bilderberg Group..

Forgive all penalties to date 1/2 of which are illegal if not more as reported and set it locked or not to go below 6.25% this way the bansk make money not loose it the people keep almost all of them in their homes and NOT ONE DIME OF TAX PAYER MONEY IS INVOLVED, NOT ONE DIME AND PROBLEM SOLVED..!

To bad Obama won't employ and endorse this solution that would especially save so many blacks from losing their first and only home..

But everyone knows Harvard Law Graduates know butkus about Macro-Economics almost all lawyers suck at finance..I don't know why but they do..

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Low interest rates didn't cause the subprime crisis and neither did the housing bubble.
Posted by: yellow on May 17, 2008 1:03 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We've had both in our history without ever having a subprime crisis. The two factors that led to the crisis. was greed and the reliance on financial speculation and consumer debt to drive an essentially stagnant economy. These two factors led to a litany of perverse incentives in the investment banking and mortgage brokerage industries to sign up millions of high risk borrowers for subprime mortgages and sell their collateralized debt as mortgage backed securities in global financial markets. From 2001 to 2006, new subprime mortgages rose from $160 billion to $600 billion which, by this peak time, they accounted for a fifth of all mortgage originations.

This practice seemed to spread risk while also gaining fresh liquidity for commercial banks which evaded FED restrictions by moving debt exposure off their balance sheets in the process of selling their mortgages to investors. Everyone made money along the way including insurers and securities rating agencies which gave much of this bad debt triple A ratings. Some of the very worst debt was actually the easiest to sell off because of the promised high returns. In the end the whole house of cards came down threatening the US economy and financial system with financial stocks dropping by a quarter or more. By the first quarter of this year about $900 billion in outstanding CDOs that now must be sold at a trmendous markdown threaten the solvency of the financial system. A consequent credit crunch could create a very deep depression.


The entire crisis has roots not in FED policies but in the chronic stagnation of US late capitalism and the perverse incentives it created for profit making in risky financial speculation. Some mortgage originators even gave their loan officers an additional 2% commission on the loan for increasing the borrowers interest rate by 125 basis points or greater at the time of the signing of the mortgage contract. Little wonder so many subprime borrowers who actually qualified for lower interest loans weren't offered them. Corruption plays a big role in this debacle.

But so does a maldistribution of income and wealth. In an economy that has been chronically stagnant for about three decades, losing more high paying jobs than it actually creates, there is constricted demand and a need for finance capital to seek ever more risky avenues of profit as the productive economy increasingly slows. The financial economy is many times the value of the actual production of goods and services. Any massive attempt to cash in on paper assets would cause default and depression. Workers are compelled to sign up for defined contribution pension schemes which shifts much of their earnings into risky stock market speculation. All this was funded by a major shift of wealth and income from the middle class and working poor to the rich in nearly four trillion dollars in tax cuts and a suppression of real wages, salaries and employee benefits through union busting. This three decade long shift has formed the basis of the new casino economy. Only a reversal of this trend through progressive taxation and massive public investment in new sectors to create full employment and needed services can save our society...and the global economy.

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If RONALD REAGAN HADN'T DESTROYED THE SAVINGS AND LOANS WOULD
Posted by: Raymond Emerson on May 17, 2008 2:02 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
we be having a mortgage crisis? Although he didn't de-regulate the little guys Ronald Reagan did de-regualate the big boys. Saving and Loans were a specialized division of banking that did ordinary housing loans. They charged and paid different interest rates and were limited in what they could loan and how they could loan. They were perfectly stable. So the republicans fixed them. Now we are where we are because of the fix.

And there are still people out there who brag on how loveable and folksy Ronald Reagan was. There sure was a lot of evil that happened on his watch. If you make it legal to steal, you will be amazed at the number of volunteers you will get. They, including Neil Bush, have all still got the money they stole and, give them credit, still voting radical right.

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