So when companies write off their debt and restructure at a lower rate
with the help of tax dollars, why don't these companies give their
customers just a few months grace to get back on their feet. After a
few months of unemployment, most creditors want all their money ASAP
even when the person gets a new job and can begin payments again.
It seems as though they don't care if they drive our country into a great
depression as long as they get theirs first. Don't they understand that a
depression will affect EVERYONE not just those suffering. Crime will
increase and those Beamer drivers might end up being killed for their car.
The wealthy and those opposed to helping anyone need to understand
they are not an island unless they live totally off the grid. They will need
customers, farmers and all the other people that make our world work.
RESIDENT EXPERT
Daniel McGinn
Mortgage Mess: Is Relief in Sight?
Why Bush's bailout will leave many borrowers out in the cold.
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A few weeks ago I wrote a column about a Florida condo owner named Hyacinth O'Meally. When she bought her home in 2005 she took out an adjustable-rate subprime mortgage. She paid exorbitant closing costs and was surprised to find out her monthly mortgage payment didn't include her property taxes of more than $300 per month. That confusion, compounded by a drop in income, made her monthly payment more than she can handle. Now, even after the bank has modified her loan, she's behind on her mortgage and may lose her home.
After that column ran, I received lots of e-mail from readers in similar straits. Some of them expressed hope that the Bush administration's proposed plan to ease the subprime crisis might offer them a solution. But these troubled borrowers are likely to be disappointed.
Here's why. Under the terms of the deal, lenders are offering to freeze the interest rates and monthly payments for five years for subprime borrowers who fit a limited set of conditions. Borrowers must be current on the loan, the loan's interest rate may not yet have reset, and the lender must determine that the borrower lacks the capacity to afford the higher payment if the interest rate adjusted upward. According to a study cited by today's New York Times, Barclay's Capital estimates that just 12 percent of subprime borrowers will benefit from the interest-rate freeze. Even before the program was officially announced it drew criticism from consumer advocates and Democratic presidential candidates.
After exchanging e-mail with a number of troubled borrowers, I can understand the criticism. When you talk with these people, what's striking is how the decision they made about their mortgage—a choice that was, in retrospect, ill-advised—is rarely the only strain on their finances. Many have also suffered a hit to their income, often due to illness, disability or job loss. While none of these borrowers have sent me their credit reports, I suspect their mortgages aren't the only payments that are causing them distress; many of them, I'd bet, are also plagued by high credit card debt or outsize car payments. Today's Wall Street Journal reports that auto loan delinquencies have jumped lately, providing new evidence that Americans' growing debt woes extend beyond home loans.
By definition, someone who has taken out a subprime mortgage has either shown a history of having trouble managing his credit or did a less than stellar job of shopping for a mortgage. (On Tuesday the Wall Street Journal reported that many subprime borrowers could have obtained a regular mortgage but were steered into a higher-cost loan.) So it's not surprising if many of these borrowers have also made other poor financial decisions. The government's bailout plan is trying to deal with the mortgage mess in isolation. Helping people with more complicated financial problems is trickier, not unlike the challenge facing doctors treating patients who suffer from two or more diseases simultaneously.
It's no surprise that there are plenty of folks who oppose a bailout of any kind. They argue that letting borrowers off the hook penalizes lenders and sets a bad precedent. If nothing else, the mortgage crisis of 2007 has helped millions of us better understand the definition of moral hazard.
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