AmericanRevealed.org
Of the 55-million families
with mortgages, 10.4-million of them “are sliding toward failure and
foreclosure”---a tragedy that will depress the U.S. housing market for years to
come, a result of too many houses for sale and too few buyers.
That’s the blunt conclusion
of distinguished economics journalist William Greider, to be published in an
article in the November 14th issue of The Nation magazine.
Greider says the solution is
to forgive the debtors: “Write down the principal they owe on their mortgage to
match the current market value of their home, so they will no longer be
underwater. Refinance the loan with a reduced interest rate, so the monthly
payment is at a level that the struggling homeowner can handle.”
Forgiving the debtors is the
right thing to do, Greider continues, “because the bankers have already been
forgiven. The largest banks were in effect relieved of any guilt for their
crimes of systemic fraud or for causing the financial breakdown---when the
government bailed them out, no questions asked.”
Far from a show of
gratitude, Greider notes the response of the banks has been ugly. “Right now,
these trillion-dollar institutions are methodically harvesting the last
possible pound of flesh from millions of homeowners before kicking these
failing debtors out of their homes---the story known as the ‘foreclosure
crisis.’”
The largest and most
powerful banks are standing in the way of the solution and the Obama
administration “is standing with them,” Greider adds, “because bankers and
other creditors would have to take a big hit if they were forced to write down
the debt owed by borrowers. The banks would have to report reduced
capital and their revenue would decline if homeowners were allowed to make
smaller monthly payments.”
President Obama, he says,
“seems to be playing a sly double game---protecting banks from sharing the pain
while proclaiming sympathy for embattled homeowners.” Greider adds, “The
government, in effect, has been sheltering banks from facing the hard truth
about their condition.” Banks may be valuing mortgages or mortgage bonds at 85
cents on the dollar when their true market value is closer to 30 cents. “That
strengthens the case for a general and orderly write-down now: if many of these
loans aren’t ever going to be rapid, then the assets now claimed by the banks
are imaginary.”
Greider quotes Stephen
Roach, a Morgan Stanley economist and lecturer at the Yale University School of
Manaagement, who says, “Some form of debt forgiveness would be a clear
positive. Debt forgivness is a big deal when so many Americans are underwater
and unable to keep up with their payments... With debt reduction, people would
feel less reluctant to spend money on new things. If you can do that, then
companies will feel more confident about future demand, less reluctant about
hiring more workers.”
Roach believes the
government can instruct Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which hold some $1.5
trillion in housing loans or mortgage-backed securities, to take a write-down
on their outstanding loans. “Then the government can put pressure on the banks
to do the same thing. The banks will resist, but they have to go along if the
government is forceful enough,” Roach says.
However, housing-finance
expert Laurie Goodman, said the government is making it harder for homeowners
to get new mortgages despite the sagging housing market. “Almost every single
proposed government action has been aimed at further tightening credit
availability,” she told the Senate Banking Committee last September.
With 25 million workers unemployed
or underemployed, the President enjoys great popular support for pushing
through a massive jobs bill, raising the minimum wage and shoveling money into
the pockets of hard-pressed homeowners to help them pay their mortgages.
Instead, as Greider says, Obama has been siding with the banks. Worse, he keeps
squandering tax dollars on foreign wars opposed by the most Americans. There’s
not much left over to stimulate the economy when the Pentagon has sucked up
$800 billion in direct costs to wage war in Iraq with indirect costs, estimated
by economist Joseph Stiglitz and Linda Bilmes, at a staggering $4 trillion.
#
(Sherwood Ross is a
Miami-based public relations consultant “for good causes” who writes on
political and military topics. Reach him at sherwoodross10@gmail.com)
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