Wild Bill
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bankers right?
They're the least of my concerns.
bankers right?
It's the fault of a small faction of Americans who will not accept individual responsibility. Politicians who encourage their behavior with entitlements share the blame.
Its funny that we still think bankers created the mess. ITs actually the housing sector that sparked it, with the help of the commercial banks. For the longest time mortgages were the safest investment possible, for people who couldnt afford to lose the money. Then the government stepped in and..... in barney franks own words: rolled the dice. They changed the lending standards.
The result was giving mortgages to everyone and their daughter, no matter if they could pay it off. Those mortgages default and house of cards comes down, pulling down the investment banks caught up in the trades.
It's my fault.
Other than casting my vote and b!tching about things, I can't say I've done much to try and fix anyrhing. How bout you guys?
Agree to a point. The federal gov't forced lending institutions to make loans to individuals that they would never make otherwise. Then, at some point, the money was too easy and everyone got in on the act. The balloon burst and every two bit politician who had pushed for the shady lending practices to begin with were the first to step up to the mic to bitc* about it. Now... we all get to pay for it.
Are you talking about the Community Reinvestment Act here, passed in the 70s? One of the fair housing acts? What policy do you have in mind that involved the federal gov't forcing private lenders to make all of that money by selling bad loans against their will?
If stuff like this is out there and people actually believe it, I give up. You can only drift so far into fiction before the exchange of ideas becomes pointless.
Well... I obviously didn't cast enough votes.
Did you sleep through the 90s and 00s when the government manufactured the idea that owning a home is the American Dream?
...But the question is how the government forced private lenders to make loans that they should not have, which is what was argued: (" The federal gov't forced lending institutions to make loans to individuals that they would never make otherwise.")...
Did the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) Lead to Risky Lending?
Sumit Agarwal, Efraim Benmelech, Nittai Bergman, Amit Seru
NBER Working Paper No. 18609
Issued in December 2012
NBER Program(s): AP CF
Yes, it did. We use exogenous variation in banks’ incentives to conform to the standards of the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) around regulatory exam dates to trace out the effect of the CRA on lending activity. Our empirical strategy compares lending behavior of banks undergoing CRA exams within a given census tract in a given month to the behavior of banks operating in the same census tract-month that do not face these exams. We find that adherence to the act led to riskier lending by banks: in the six quarters surrounding the CRA exams lending is elevated on average by about 5 percent every quarter and loans in these quarters default by about 15 percent more often. These patterns are accentuated in CRA-eligible census tracts and are concentrated among large banks. The effects are strongest during the time period when the market for private securitization was booming.
But that's exactly what the Community Reinvestment Act does. You need enough CRA points to keep your charter. (It even begs the question -- if the banks were going to make these loans anyway, why would we need the law in the first place?)
And while you can't necessarily blame the "housing crisis" on any single thing, the CRA certainly didn't help, and most likely made things worse.
Did the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) Lead to Risky Lending?
Interesting. Really good study, and all of the evidence I had previously seen on the topic showed zero effect of the CRA on lending activity. This is useful.
So the CRA was developed as a means to rectify the federal government's role in encouraging discrimination in lending. The history is that when the gov't started guaranteeing mortgages from the 1930s and expanding through the 1950s, the official criteria for evaluating loans used the racial composition of the community to determine whether a loan was risky or not. the effect was that entire neighborhoods were 'outlined in red' if they were deemed too risky to guarantee a loan b/c the neighborhood was racially mixed (hence redlining). These criteria, which were developed by the federal gov't, were then used by private lenders which resulted in large-scale discrimination in mortgage lending. This is a major reason why nonwhites never left central cities like white ethnics did - they couldn't get access to mortgage subsidies b/c their presence in communities made these communities too risk to loan to.
Built into the CRA is language that encourages big banks to provide coverage to communities that have been underserved by financial institutions - there is no penalty for non-compliance with the CRA, except that information on where banks make loans is used (in theory) in decision-making about expansion of bank branches and mergers. Most studies have shown that the information is usually ignored in these decisions, but this paper provide some counter evidence. The CRA also requires that banks use normal standards to evaluate loan risk.
So if the CRA was responsible for the housing crisis, we'd probably assume that the CRA was instituted or changed in the runup to the collapse. It wasn't. It was implemented in the 1970s and revised last in the 1990s. Second, we'd want to make the case that the crisis was driven by loans made in places and by banks that were subject to CRA guidelines. I've seen estimates that CRA-affected areas count for less than 10% of subprime loans made in the years prior to the collapse (I could probably find the cite if I looked around for a while but don't remember where the estimate came from offhand).
Let me scale back my original language. this is good evidence suggesting that the presence of CRA may affect loan activity among banks that are subject to CRA guidelines. this is interesting, as everything I have seen prior to this paper suggests that it did not. If there was an effect, this is a failure of regulators to comply with the actual CRA law, which requires that sound lending policies are used in all communities, including those that have not traditionally been the most profitable communities. No quotas for number of prevalence of loans have ever been part of the CRA. The failure lies in the increasingly lax oversight of the types of loans that were being made inside and outside of CRA-designated areas.
But the key point is that the scale of this possible effect of the CRA is so small that it would be extremely difficult to argue that this had anything to do with the housing crisis.
Did you sleep through the 90s and 00s when the government manufactured the idea that owning a home is the American Dream?
2 things I hate the most religion and politics
Then why comment on a thread with this title?
ok, you say it's not bank execs, so let's see...
Homeowners?
I agree - those with mortgages have become the most dependent segment of the population, recipients of enormous gov't handouts thru the mortgage interest deduction, our biggest federal housing expenditure. Most goes to the wealthiest homeowners, so maybe this is the group you mean?
Pat, did you really just go all the way back through this thing and quote a post from more than two months ago...?? lol
The mortgage interest deduction is not an "expenditure" for the federal government. It's a tax deduction, not a tax credit.
What's your definition of wealthy? Most wealthy people I know rarely pay interest and would not benefit from the deduction at all. Let's assume, however, that I'm a wealthy, single, male tax-filer with a $1,000,000 mortgage and a 5% interest rate. I can only deduct interest from the first $500,000 - roughly $24,000 per year. If I didn't enjoy the benefit of the deduction, my tax liability would increase by $8,400 (35% of $24,000). If I was wealthy, do you really think $700 per month would set me back? If the government took it away, and I had to pay my "fair share" would it "level the playing field"?
The mortgage interest deduction benefits families with average salary who take out traditional mortgages, not jumbo loans. A family with a $250,000 mortgage reduces their taxable income by $12,000 per year. The deduction, in many instances, allows them to be homeowners rather than renters - which is the policy reason behind the mortgage interest tax deduction.
What's your take on section 8? You know, the government expenditure that allows people to live in homes and neighborhoods that they otherwise couldn't afford for free.
You generally don't want to evaluate policy based on how your friends use it. They may not pay interest on a mortgage, most homeowners do. The estimated cost of the interest deduction is roughly 100 billion. 77% of that goes to people making anywhere from $75,000 to $500,000. It's a regressive giveaway that is implemented through the tax code. Everyone who's eligible gets it, the definition of an entitlement. That said, those who deduct interest from their taxes are very happy to have that extra money.
The old section 8 program (now housing choice vouchers) is a great comparison. It costs somewhere around 17 billion I believe (might be off by a small amount). It goes to low-income families and allows them to pay only up to 30% of their income on rent. It is extremely difficult to get a housing voucher through this program, with wait lists of decades in some cities. When people get off of the wait list they have to go through an intensive screening process with months of meetings in order to be able to use it. Most who are eligible for it do not get it. Those who get it are, I'm sure, absolutely thrilled to have housing that is affordable.
In your mind, people such as the recipients of housing vouchers are responsible for the problems in this country - the old idea of the "undeserving poor." You argue that their dependence on government handouts is the major problem in this country. what about the affluent (or anyone on this site, for that matter) who deduct mortgage interest from their taxes? they get much more than the poor do, and they get it automatically, a pure entitlement. why is your anger directed at low-income recipients of federal assistance, and not high-income recipients? are you similarly angry at veterans who receive gov't assistance? the elderly? the disabled? farmers?
...The estimated cost of the interest deduction is roughly 100 billion...
Well, if you mean the lost revenue because of the deduction, it's more like 70 billion. And the only reason it's this high is because people assumed it would stay in place.
And it's not like it does only bad things for bad people. Much of the labor market is driven by the housing market, the deduction stimulates consumer spending, and many, if not most, pension plans, retirement funds, mutual funds, and even our Federal Reserve buy these mortgage-backed securities in the open market. Cutting the deduction now would hurt all of these things, just so Uncle Sam could spend it in his infinite wisdom...
Well, if you mean the lost revenue because of the deduction, it's more like 70 billion. And the only reason it's this high is because people assumed it would stay in place.
And it's not like it does only bad things for bad people. Much of the labor market is driven by the housing market, the deduction stimulates consumer spending, and many, if not most, pension plans, retirement funds, mutual funds, and even our Federal Reserve buy these mortgage-backed securities in the open market. Cutting the deduction now would hurt all of these things, just so Uncle Sam could spend it in his infinite wisdom...
Different topic.
You guys think we're gonna tomahawk Syria?
You generally don't want to evaluate policy based on how your friends use it.
They may not pay interest on a mortgage, most homeowners do.
77% of that goes to people making anywhere from $75,000 to $500,000.
It's a regressive giveaway that is implemented through the tax code. Everyone who's eligible gets it, the definition of an entitlement. That said, those who deduct interest from their taxes are very happy to have that extra money.
In your mind, people such as the recipients of housing vouchers are responsible for the problems in this country - the old idea of the "undeserving poor." You argue that their dependence on government handouts is the major problem in this country. what about the affluent (or anyone on this site, for that matter) who deduct mortgage interest from their taxes? they get much more than the poor do, and they get it automatically, a pure entitlement. why is your anger directed at low-income recipients of federal assistance, and not high-income recipients? are you similarly angry at veterans who receive gov't assistance? the elderly? the disabled? farmers?
I never mentioned my friends.
And most of those mortgage paying homeowners are not wealthy. That's my point, the deduction helps middle class Americans far more than it does wealthy Americans... You consider someone making $75,000 wealthy?
The government isn't providing anything. They are simply allowing a tax deduction to promote a public policy.
Why do you assume I'm angry? What anger have I directed at anyone?
If we do send missiles into Syria, Hamas will probably bomb Israel and possibly other US interests. Russia and China are strong allies of Syria and Iran is talking sh!t. With Iraq in shambles and Egypt a mess, things are very on edge in the middle east. Not to mention Al-Qaeda everywhere. There is a sh!t storm brewing.
If we do bomb Syria, I hope all the progressive/ code pink/ anti war activists still have their banners and signs ready for nationwide protests like they were 10 years ago.
I'll also be asking all the people driving toyota prius or subaru's with the bumper stickers reading "war is not the answer" or "coexist" why they voted for a war-mongerer.