This Isn’t Your Father’s Recession

From a site I never heard of before, called Reason.com:

“Something called the National Consumer Law Center criticizes state mortgage-mediation schemes as well as the Obama Administration’s Home Affordable Modification Program, which at last count had managed to prevent 235,247 homes from coming onto the market. However, data from the Federal Reserve and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency indicate that even when these programs succeed, about half of all the renegotiated loans end up back in default soon afterward.

In those cases, the renegotiation has made things worse for everybody. The lender ends up with lower payments in the short term and then has to foreclose on a less-valuable property at some point in the future. The borrower gets no financial upside and (though he or she gets the use of a subsidized domicile for some period of time) is encouraged to stay in a losing situation when immediate foreclosure would have been a more merciful option. Prospective buyers get locked out as dumb lenders, deadbeat borrowers and the government all collude to keep the price of the house artificially inflated. And taxpayers have to spend $75 billion (the budget of HUD’s Making Home Affordable program) for the privilege of making it all happen. The best option for all concerned would be to get the deadbeat out of the house as quickly as possible, but nobody is doing that.

Put it all together, and throw in mainstream media outlets that as recently as June were calling for mortgage haircuts specifically to allow people to keep borrowing against their houses, and you’ve got the mother of all perfect storms mixed with the crack cocaine of third rails on steroids. The foreclosure wave may seem all tired and 2008, but it’s hotter than ever.”

#mce_temp_url#

One Response to “This Isn’t Your Father’s Recession”

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  1. John Gumersell says:

    Chip,

    I just stumbled upon your blog. My family lives in Bridgewater and I moved a little north to the Chester area a few years back. I appreciate the perspective of anyone involved in Central or North NJ real estate.

    This post is right on the money. The banks are only “kicking the can down the road”. Unless they come up with a better solution, we are in for a lot more pain.

    Thanks for the info.

    John
    NJ Real Estate Lender

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