Making the sub-prime mortgage issue worse for fun and profit
Reason mag has a good article on how politicians are worsening the mortage crisis.
Opening para:
Nothing is more fun than doing noble deeds with someone else’s money, and right now, Democrats are getting ready for a rollicking good time. Contemplating the subprime mortgage problem, with numerous borrowers unable to pay their debts, the party’s presidential candidates and congressional leaders have a simple solution: Fleece the lenders.
And an interesting point:
But lenders who made bad decisions are already paying the price. Many mortgage companies have gone bankrupt. And if these loans are so unconscionable, the question is not why the foreclosure rate is so high but why it’s so low.
According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, less than 5 percent of subprime adjustable-rate mortgages are in the process of foreclosure. The vast majority of borrowers are making their payments, keeping their homes and asking no one for a bailout.
Concluding paras:
If the government imposes the punitive option, another problem will arise down the road: Lenders will be far less willing to offer credit to people with flawed credit records. Even the Bush administration’s plan for mortgage companies to freeze rates on a small number of loans effectively warns lenders to steer clear of all but the soundest borrowers. As Yogi Berra might put it, if mortgage companies don’t want to do business with certain customers, nobody is going to stop them.
The consequence of this approach is clear. We’d be robbing tomorrow’s subprime borrowers for the benefit of today’s. Of course, when it comes to proposed solutions, robbery seems to be the order of the day.