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OpEdNews Op Eds    H1'ed 12/25/11

Fed Economists Urged DC to Help Homeowners Directly

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This article cross-posted from WhowhatWhy

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This just in: Not everybody working for the Fed is evil. And some of them had a pretty great idea for solving the housing crisis. But their concept was not adopted...

In January, 2009, just as Barack Obama was taking office, economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston presented some suggestions for dealing with the mortgage crisis. Their proposal, posted to the Boston Fed's website at the time, called for direct aid to the public, rather than to banks.

Their "Proposal to Help Distressed Homeowners" fell on deaf ears. (This report was brought to our attention by the New England Complex Systems Institute, whose faculty one of the Proposal's co-authors has joined.)

The report essentially questions the logic of bailing out banks reeling from bad home loans, rather than rescuing the homeowners themselves. It is important and worthy of discussion. Among other things, it implicitly draws attention to the extent to which federal policy is driven by narrow interests, rather than serving broader public needs.

Had Washington stepped in and provided direct loans or grants to the most vulnerable of homeowners, those people might have been able to stay afloat through temporarily difficult circumstances. (It's not like people wanted to lose their homes.) And even the bankers would have benefited from this.

Instead, bailout funds went to perpetuating the status quo and enriching the very people whose irresponsibility played a key role in creating the economic crisis.

I called Jeff Fuhrer, a co-author of the report and Executive Vice President and Senior Policy Advisor of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. He explained that the report had been produced in late 2008, just as the bailout that did go through, TARP, was being signed into law by George W. Bush. The report would have been an alternative. It also was attractively simple -- and logical--exactly what we want government programs to be.

Fuhrer and his colleagues estimated that having Uncle Sam step in to keep people in their homes would have cost $25-50 billion, a pittance compared to the bank bailouts of $700 billion, plus a whole lot more in short-term loans. (On the positive side, much of the bailout money has now been repaid. Of course, it's also likely that ordinary people would be inclined to pay back such monies.)

The Boston Fed economists offered policymakers two options: loans and grants. Applicants would have to show that they had negative home equity (mortgage more than home value), and that they had suffered significant income disruption. The homeowner would no longer have to interact with the entity that made the original loan, and that entity would have no basis -- or reason -- for foreclosing.

By comparison, the Obama administration's flagship program to help homeowners, HAMP, was quite a different thing: very modest help, rendered permanently. This typically involves a reduction in principal or interest -- or both -- but not necessarily enough to keep people in their homes. Some of these loan modifications reduced mortgage payments by about a quarter, but that ordinarily isn't enough to prevent home loss for someone with no income coming in. Plus, the program was designed to help the lenders, who could just choose to foreclose if they found it more advantageous than working things out. Fewer than 200,000 mortgages have been permanently altered under HAMP, and it has generally not helped the unemployed.

What folks need, instead, is meaningful help for the period in which they're in crisis. As the report notes, research shows that most people who are underwater with their homes ran into a double-whammy: negative equity in a property whose value has declined, and an adverse, life-changing event like job loss. People who suffer one or the other are usually able to handle their mortgage payments, but job loss plus a steep decline in home value spells disaster for most.

The proposal by the Boston Fed economists would have solved this problem: after rigorously determining eligibility, the government would directly make a significant portion of the distressed homeowner's mortgage payment, and then either loan the rather minor interest on that amount to the homeowner or make it a grant. Later on, under the loan formulation, when homeowners had recovered, and presumably found employment, they would begin repaying the government. These loans/grants would not exceed a couple of years.

From a political standpoint, a simple, understandable program that keeps people in their homes and doesn't turn into a permanent bailout is a winner.

Today, with even more of an aversion toward spending public funds on anything at all, Fuhrer and his colleagues are talking up a drastically reduced homeowner relief package. This would require that lenders work out something livable for the duration of a person's unemployment or significant reduction in ability to pay.

Fuhrer explained that private lenders could initiate such forbearance if they wanted to, but mostly don't. However, if Uncle Sam got involved, the government would have leverage over Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which hold most of the outstanding mortgages, and, in addition, it could if necessary guarantee all approved loans.

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