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Rescuing The Drowning Homeowners
A new report from Moody's Economy.com states that 8.8 million
homeowners, or 10.3
percent of the total, are
"underwater," meaning they owe more on
their homes than the homes are worth. Mark Zandi, the site's chief
economist, observed, "The last time we saw so many homeowners with so
many home values that were worth less than the amount of mortgage they
owed was back
in
the Great Depression." As the
housing crisis continues to slow the
economy, effective solutions from the government are needed
immediately. The
8.8 million figure is double
the percentage of just a year
ago, and by the end of 2008, as many
as 15
million U.S. households may be
underwater, according to Jan Hatzius
of Goldman Sachs. This increase may "fuel an increase in foreclosures,
erode
prices and increase mortgage bond losses." As Sen.
John Kerry
(D-MA) writes today in the Boston Herald, "If we really want to address
the economic
anxieties of the average
American, we must deal with the mortgage crisis and help hard-working
families keep
their homes."
ACTION
IS NEEDED: "Our country
faces a likely serious
and possibly devastating
economic
downturn. Policymakers must act to stem the severity to the extent they
can," notes John Podesta and Laura Tyson of Center for American
Progress (CAP). Foreclosures
jumped 75 percent nationally for all
of 2007, and a recent report from the Joint Economic Committee
estimates that over $100
billion in housing wealth will
be lost through 2009. Housing prices
have now declined for 11
consecutive months. Some
observers seem remarkably cavalier about
the enormous potential loss of American wealth, retirement, and
education savings represented by plummeting home values for not merely
subprime borrowers, but for whole communities, arguing
that this is "just a natural correction of the market and that policy
makers should let market forces play themselves out." President Bush continues
to insist that the economy is
fine. Conservative housing experts
like the American Enterprise Institute's Alex Pollack even agree there
is great
danger of a over-correction with
house prices in freefall.
"The risks
to the financial
health of families are simply
too high," notes
CAP Senior Fellow Christian Weller. "The
economy needs a dual solution. For one, income
has to grow faster and families
need to work out solutions
for the mortgages that they
cannot pay." The free-fall in home
prices in many communities undermines refinancing options for all
homeowners. CAP has also proposed a Great
American Dream Neighborhood Stabilization Fund
(GARDNS), along the
lines of the recent proposal in Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid's
(D-NV) Foreclosure Prevention Act legislation, moving funds to states
and localities to acquire foreclosed properties quickly before
neighborhoods deteriorate to the point of pricing collapse and blight.
NO
MORE LIP SERVICE: Voluntary
efforts and the limited
interest rate moratorium offered
by Secretary Paulson's Hope Now
Alliance are too little, too late. Lawmakers are considering
ways to aid the class of
"underwater" borrowers, keep more people
in their homes, and prevent prices from continuing to fall. The best
proposals will ensure that those financial institutions that
irresponsibly made credit available will take serious losses. This
would not be a bailout, but instead would be a way to
facilitate a
transfer the loans to new lenders who can restructure these loans on
sustainable terms. Senate Banking
Committee Chairman
Chris Dodd (D-CT) expressed interest in a plan to develop
a new agency for this kind of
transfer. House Financial
Services Chairman Barney Frank (D-MA) is considering
a variety of proposals. CAP
Senior Fellow Michael Barr discussed the
Saving America's Family Equity
-- or SAFE loan plan -- inspired by
the Home Owner's Loan Corporation created to
deal with foreclosures in the Great Depression. To speed assistance to
borrowers, the SAFE plan envisions using existing entities like the
Federal Housing
Administration, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Treasury to transfer the
mortgages and offer new products for loans that better reflect the
value of the homes and the borrower’s capacity to repay.
STATES
ACT: As they get hit by
the housing crisis, states are demanding action, "calling on the Bush
Administration to deliver
a
comprehensive solution to the
ongoing mortgage crisis." Govs.
Martin O'Malley (D-MA), Eliot Spitzer (D-NY), and Jon Corzine (D-NJ)
said the two plans offered by the Bush Administration "exclude
the
majority of homeowners who need
help." "The Administration should
also take responsibility for the role of federal regulators and
national banks in this crisis, and engage in greater collaboration with
states in the development of a solution to this problem and a
preventive strategy for the future," they said. Neil Pierce today says
the GARDNS proposal is "appealing," as it would "provide
money quickly and efficiently to
local nonprofits or cities to buy
foreclosed or vacant absentee-owned homes and offer them, as quickly as
possible, for sale to qualified low- and moderate-income families on
affordable terms."
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Following plans by Stanford and Harvard to dramatically cut tuition for poorer students, Brown University announced today it will eliminate tuition for students whose parents earn less than $60,000.
ARIZONA:
"State and local governments tighten belts as tax revenues fall, a
ripple effect of the housing slump."
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: "Lead in tap water rose to dangerously high
levels in hundreds of District homes."
HOMELAND
SECURITY:
Several governors are unhappy with Real ID and "a batch of new Medicaid
rules that could cost
them $13 billion over five years."
THINK
PROGRESS: Weekly Standard editor William Kristol: "I recommend the
politics of fear."
AT
LARGELY: CBS affiliate in Alabama blocked the broadcast of 60
Minutes last night, which featured a story about Karl Rove's efforts to
discredit former Alabama Governor Don Siegelman.
NO COMMENT:
Karl Rove's response to the 60 Minutes report is misleading and
factually inaccurate.
"[I]t's a largely unscientific hoax. And it's a political concoction."
-- Right-wing pundit Mary Matalin, 2/20/08,
on global warming
VERSUS
"Warming of the climate system is unequivocal, as is now evident from
observations of increases in global average air and ocean temperatures,
widespread melting of snow and ice, and rising global mean sea level."
-- Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, 2/07




