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Economic Policy Center Demos Responds to Housing Rescue Bill Signed Today:
2008-07-30 14:46:00
Economic Policy Center Demos Responds to Housing Rescue Bill Signed Today:
"Hundreds of Thousands of Foreclosures Will Be Prevented; Further
Reform Needed To Cover Millions Left Out and Prevent Abuse By Private
Lenders"
WASHINGTON, July 30 /EMWNews/ -- Today President Bush
signed what has been called the most important piece of housing legislation
in years. With the enactment of the Housing and Economic Recovery Act,
Washington has extended a lifeline of help to homeowners caught in
dangerous and deceptive mortgages. In response, Miles Rapoport, President
of the national public policy center Demos, which has extensively studied
the American credit and home lending crisis, issued the following statement
praising the protections of the new bill, but warning that it doesn't go
far enough to prevent foreclosures or industry abuses.
"This rescue bill couldn't have come too soon, and it outlines several
immediate steps that will address some of the most pressing issues of the
current mortgage crisis. In one key provision, the Federal Housing
Administration (FHA) will insure new fixed-rate loans for an estimated
400,000 families who would otherwise almost certainly lose their homes to
foreclosure. The legislation also improves mortgage disclosure; creates an
affordable housing trust fund; allocates $3.9 billion in grants for local
damage-containment efforts; and authorizes the Treasury Department to
extend emergency financial assistance to the imperiled housing finance
giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
"But this is no panacea. The measure includes questionable tax credits
and has serious deficiencies:
-- Homeowners cannot get help unless lenders or loan servicers
voluntarily agree to a reduced loan balance
-- The FHA rescue program contains no mechanism for dealing with
multiple-lien situations
-- The Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac provisions seem to set a precedent of
letting private managers milk these government-supported entities for
personal profit in good times, at no cost in bad times
-- The $3.9 billion in grants pales alongside the economic damage to
hard-hit states and localities, where the foreclosure crisis has brought a
double-whammy of increased costs and reduced tax revenues
"In its newly-issued report, 'Beyond the Mortgage Meltdown: Addressing
the Emergency / Averting a Future Catastrophe,' Demos proposes additional
short- and long-term steps, including:
-- Concerted follow-up efforts to overcome the recalcitrance of lenders
and loan servicers
-- Liberalization of bankruptcy rules to allow court-supervised
negotiations over home mortgages, as the law already permits with loans
secured by yachts or vacation properties
-- Legal liability for securities packagers and investors when loans
are deceptive
-- A supplementary direct-loan program along the lines suggested by
Federal Deposit Insurance Company chair Sheila Bair
-- More help for renters caught in landlord foreclosure situations
-- A regulatory regime that covers mortgage brokers, mortgage
securitizers, and other parties who have been effectively unregulated until
now
-- A single mortgage watchdog agency with a clear commitment to the
public interest
"Despite its gaps, the Housing and Economic Recovery Act is an
important measure in its own right and could mark an important turning
point in the debate over economic policy. Since the 1980s, an influential
camp of economists and policymakers has sought to portray government as the
enemy of a strong economy. The mortgage meltdown has awakened a new
recognition of the need for regulation and public infrastructure--not only
to protect consumers against deceptive practices, but to protect the
economy and the society against the boom-and-bust swings of the financial
markets.
"In the words of Demos' new report: 'The mortgage industry, with all
its recent troubles, has placed two large projects on the public policy
agenda. One is rescue and damage control. The other is the construction of
new rules to prevent another such disaster. Mistakes will surely be made in
both these enterprises, but history joins common sense in suggesting that
the long-term results will be positive for lenders, borrowers and the
nation as a whole.'"
The "Beyond the Mortgage Meltdown" report and extensive research on the
lending industry and American household finances can be downloaded at
http://www.demos.org.
For more information, or to schedule an interview with Miles Rapoport
or "Beyond the Mortgage Meltdown" author James Lardner, please contact Tim
Rusch at [email protected] or (212) 389-1407.
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