Save the Homeowners, Not the Hedge Funds

by Dean Baker and Andrew Samwick

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This column was published on August 31, 2007 by Providence Journal.
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The mortgage-market meltdown has gotten big enough that even Congress
is taking notice. Members of Congress, especially those running for
president, are now racing to propose bills that promise relief to the
millions of homeowners who can't pay their mortgages.

They are right to act. In the run-up to this crisis, there was
precious little counsel to families at the margin of homeownership
that it could be better economically to not take on the commitment of
ownership. There was aggressive marketing of deceptively worded
mortgages that were virtually certain to reset to payments that these
families could not afford. And the government has for years been
abetting this process, pointing to ever-increasing rates of
homeownership as a policy success and pushing for the low short-term
interest rates that fostered the bubble in prices and the increase in
leverage that precipitated the crisis.

In light of this history, it is important that policy be focused on
assisting financially strapped homeowners, not lenders that issued
deceptive mortgages or investors who foolishly speculated in
mortgage-backed debt.

Some of the proposals currently on the table, for example, getting
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac more involved in the subprime- and
jumbo-mortgage market, will do more to help the speculators than the
homeowners. After all, if private investors are not prepared to hold
this debt, why should these government-backed agencies jump in and buy
risky mortgages at above-market prices?

There is a simple way to allow troubled homeowners to stay in their
homes without also bailing out the mortgage issuers and speculators.

Congress can pass legislation granting current homeowners the right to
stay in their homes as long as they like, simply by paying the
fair-market rent. In other words, no one gets tossed out on the
street, as long as they can pay the rental value of their house. The
fair rent would be determined by an independent appraiser ? exactly
the same way that a lender is supposed to determine the size of a
mortgage that can be issued on a home.

Under this plan, homeowners would turn over their property to the
mortgage holder. This would generally not be a loss since borrowers
currently face crises precisely because they owe more than the value
of their house. If the value of the home exceeded their debt, then
they wouldn't have to sign up for the program.

As a renter with secure tenure, the former homeowner would have
incentive to do necessary maintenance and keep the home from falling
into disrepair. This would prevent the blight that is already hitting
neighborhoods where foreclosures have become commonplace.

The mortgage holder would get possession of the house, but they would
be stuck having the former homeowner as a tenant. Otherwise the
mortgage holder is free to hold or sell the property as they choose.
Being stuck with a renter may reduce the resale value of the house,
but intelligent investors knew there was risk when they got into the
business.

To limit the size of the program and to ensure that it only benefits
those who are really in need, there can be a cap placed on the value
of homes that qualify. For example, Congress could stipulate that only
homes with a market value below the median price for an area are
eligible for this plan.

This security-of-housing proposal meets the needs of the homeowners
who were victimized by deceptive lending practices and
pro-homeownership ideologues. It gives them the right to stay in their
home as long as they want. It accomplishes this task in a way that
provides minimal opportunities for fraud and should require very
little by way of new government bureaucracy.

It also manages to benefit homeowners in crisis without also rescuing
the financial institutions that were speculating in mortgages gone
bad. This will give the presidential candidates, and other members of
Congress, a clear choice between helping distressed homeowners or
bailing out financial institutions that should have known better.
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Dean Baker is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy
Research. Andrew Samwick is a professor of economics and director of
the Nelson A. Rockefeller Center at Dartmouth College and former chief
economist on the staff of President George W. Bush's Council of
Economic Advisers.
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Center for Economic and Policy Research, 1611 Connecticut Ave, NW,
Suite 400, Washington, DC 20009
Phone: (202) 293-5380, Fax: (202) 588-1356, Home: www.cepr.net
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Jim Devine / "In the years since the phrase became a cliché, I have
received any number of compliments for my supposed ability to 'think
outside the box.' Actually, it has been a struggle for me to perceive
just what these 'boxes' were — why they were there, why other people
regarded them as important, where their borderlines might be, how to
live safely within and without them." -- Tim Page (THE NEW YORKER,
August 20, 2007).

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