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How and Why the Federal
Government Created the Mortgage Meltdown
A New Policy Report by Stan J. Liebowitz Reveals the
Causes of the Crisis Contact: Wendy Honett, 510-632-1366
OAKLAND, Calif., Oct. 7 /Christian
Newswire/ -- We are experiencing one of the worst financial upheavals of
the post-WWII era, driven primarily by a vast increase in the number of
mortgage defaults. But why did the mortgage market meltdown so badly? Why
were there so many defaults when the economy was not particularly weak? And
why weren't the securities based upon these mortgages considered anywhere as
risky as they actually turned out to be?
In his new Independent Policy Report, Anatomy of a Train
Wreck: Causes of the Mortgage Meltdown (The Independent Institute / October
3, 2008), Research Fellow and economist Stan J. Liebowitz reveals that the
federal government has led a misguided attack on underwriting standards for
more than a decade in a politically-motivated attempt to increase
homeownership, particularly for minorities and the less affluent.
Homeownership had been stagnant in the U.S. for some time,
Liebowitz says. Though seemingly noble for the government to want to
stimulate new ownership, "the tool chosen to achieve this goal was one that
endangered the entire mortgage enterprise: intentional weakening of the
traditional mortgage lending standards," he continues.
The government's weakened underwriting standards allowed
lenders to grant mortgages with virtually no down payments, few restrictions
on the size of monthly payments relative to income, little examination of
credit scores or employment history, and so forth. Initially these new rules
succeeded in increasing home ownership rates, and "the decline in mortgage
underwriting standards was universally praised as an 'innovation' in
mortgage lending," Liebowitz says.
As home ownership appeared to become easier, consumer demand
spiked, resulting in a pricing boom at the turn of the 21st century. The
rising prices ushered in a host of speculators, who accounted for roughly a
quarter of sales during this time.
The speculators would buy and subsequently sell houses over
short periods of time in the expectation of turning a profit, and of course
the new loan standards appealed to them. They pursued adjustable rate
mortgages with the smallest down payments and the lowest interest rates in
order to secure the biggest return. It never mattered how painful these
mortgages might become years down the road, because the home would be sold
again long before then. As borrowers began to default on their loans,
though, the high housing prices began to decrease. When the speculators
realized they could no longer make a profit, they naturally left the market,
leaving the investors who backed them with the mortgage debt. Liebowitz
argues that this hypothesis—rather than the popular subprime vulture
hypothesis—fits much better with the fact that foreclosures increased mainly
for adjustable rate mortgages and not fixed rate, regardless of whether
mortgages were prime or subprime.
It is necessary to understand what caused the mortgage crisis
in order to avoid repeating history. Many pin the blame for the crisis on
greedy and manipulative lenders or the speculators who bet on the basis of
artificially inflated prices. However, in Anatomy of Train Wreck, Liebowitz
argues that the government-dominated housing and regulatory establishment is
truly at fault. Powerful government agencies and intellectuals must
understand the imperative need for strict underwriting standards. Such
standards are essential safeguards that ensure that housing prices
accurately reflect supply and demand in the housing industry, preventing a
housing bubble like the one that led to the current crisis, Liebowitz
concludes. Lawmakers and government housing officials would do well to
understand this, and they just might manage to avoid such a train wreck in
the future.
Anatomy of a Train Wreck is available online
here and will appear in the Independent Institute's forthcoming book,
Housing
America: Building Out of a Crisis, edited by Randall G. Holcombe and
Benjamin Powell.
About the Author
Stan J. Liebowitz is a Research Fellow at The Independent
Institute and is the Ashbel Smith Professor of Economics and Director of the
Center for the Analysis of Property Rights and Innovation at the University
of Texas at Dallas. Dr. Liebowitz received his Ph.D. in economics from the
University of California at Los Angeles and his books include Winners,
Losers & Microsoft: Competition and Antitrust in High Technology (with
Stephen Margolis) and Internet Sense and Nonsense. |
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