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The Coming Foreclosure Tsunami
Unlike most hearings on the Hill, last week's meeting of the Joint Economic Committee actually got more interesting the longer it went on. While the first half-hour featured Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke offering his modest, softly downbeat but not panicked predictions about how the unfolding subprime mess would affect the broader economy, the last hour provided an opportunity to hear committee members give their own often eccentric diagnoses and predictions.
Kansas Republican Senator Sam Brownback opined that tax cuts, shockingly, were probably the best way to deal with the current crisis. New Hampshire Republican Senator John Sununu spent much of his allotted time pointing out that he'd done a better job of predicting future trends of housing inventories in March than the chairman. "I was right," he told Bernanke with a smirk, "and you were wrong." ("Well, Senator, you were right and I was wrong," Bernanke intoned back into the mic with a deadpan expression that basically said, "Satisfied, dick?") And Senator Robert Bennett, a Republican from Utah, offered a refreshingly honest articulation of the conservative view of the unfolding debacle: "Markets make better decisions than governments do, and the market will punish, the market will reward and the market will ultimately stabilize. For the market is a just and wrathful God!" (OK, I made up that last sentence.)
But amid the grandstanding, Maryland Congressman Elijah Cummings injected some welcome perspective. "Many members of Congress now, Chairman, are holding forums in their districts, as I will be doing very shortly, to help people who are coming to our doors literally with tears in their eyes and trying to figure out how they're going to manage a foreclosure that's right around the corner.... It seems like you have painted a very rosy picture, but if you came and walked through my district, I think people would be very...surprised that you seem so calm."
Bernanke was defensive: "Congressman, first, I don't know how you got the impression that I was unconcerned about foreclosures."
"I didn't say you were unconcerned," Cummings shot back. "I just said you seem to be pretty calm about it." Foreclosures in Maryland were up more than 400 percent in the third quarter, compared with the first. Minority homeowners, like those in Cummings's inner-city Baltimore district, are getting hit particularly hard. "I know that so often what happens is that when we're making decisions in the suites, we forget about the people who actually have to go through this," Cummings said. But "we're becoming a bit alarmed."
In past financial implosions, of S&Ls in the '80s or Long Term Capital Management in the '90s, it was easy to name the villains but far trickier to find the victims. Not so here. They're everywhere, not just in inner-city Baltimore. There are subdivisions in the exurbs that are beginning to resemble ghost towns.
So what is to be done? The long-term challenge is to regulate an industry that, left to its own devices, seems to have eaten its young. Last week the Mortgage Reform and Anti Predatory Lending Act of 2007 passed out of Barney Frank's House Financial Services Committee with the support of nine Republicans. It's far from perfect, but it represents a small step in the right direction. The mortgage industry is fighting it tooth and nail.
The more immediate issue, though, is what to do about the millions of people who live in homes that are in danger of going under in the coming tidal wave of foreclosure. North Carolina Democratic Representative Brad Miller has proposed one common-sense solution. He has sponsored a bill that would allow bankruptcy judges to amend the terms of home mortgages. As the law currently stands, the terms of a mortgage on a yacht or a vacation home can be adjusted during bankruptcy, but the primary residence is off-limits. "This makes no sense," said Eric Stein of the Center for Responsible Lending in testimony before the House Judiciary Committee Subcommittee on Commercial and Administrative Law. "The current bankruptcy law deprives mostly low-wealth and middle-class families of protections available to all other debtors and grants lenders on home mortgages a special protection not available to any other type of lender."
Correcting this quirk of bankruptcy law seems like the kind of fairly straightforward modification you might want your Democratic Congress to make in the midst of a massively disruptive financial crisis. But if you've been following the Democratic Congress, you've probably already predicted that some in the caucus are circling the wagons to defend the mortgage industry. A few weeks ago, sixteen "Blue Dog" Democrats from conservative districts sent a letter to House Judiciary Committee chairman John Conyers, asking him to delay considering Miller's bill because it might undermine the provisions of the bankruptcy bill that President Bush signed into law in 2005. That bill, which made it harder for the broke and desperate to declare bankruptcy, stands as one of the most egregious examples of legislative malpractice of the last five years.
"Guns are one thing," wrote blogger Matt Stoller on OpenLeft in response to the letter, "but there is no strong grassroots movement in conservative districts on behalf of big banks. These people are simply whores for credit card companies and banking interests building profitable de facto debtors prisons."
If the Blue Dogs think that standing with lenders against borrowers makes for good politics or good policy, perhaps they should go take a walk through Representative Cummings's district.
Or, you know, their own.




32 Comments so far
Show AllIf Lou Dobbs and Greg Palast is correct, the class war is real and this component is just one that is designed to help the process. It goes in the category with Pay Day loans and furniture rental companys-they are all on the same client destruction path. But what gets me, is why? Where are we supposed to go?
hey all you progressive classroom teachers---here's an idea for a multidisciplinary project: take just one of these massive ordinances and go through it line by line, subjecting its content to critical analysis, and report on it to your congressional reps (since they probably didn't have time to read it before voting on it.)
reward the first kid to raise a hand and say "class warfare" with a gold star and safe passage to a country with no extradition treaty with the u.s.
How many members of congress are facing foreclosure?
We have been in a class war since were gained independence. It used to be that just the poor were the victims. The middle class was able to buy its way out of the war. Now the poor can no longer support the rich so the middle class becomes the new victim in the class war. It won't be long before the rich will be eating the rich.
Hoa binh
Ralph fought hard against predatory lending pre-Bush.
Then Bush comes in and stops individuals from declaring bankruptcy.
Now the public is just finding out it's going to come back to bite us!
The MSM let's us down again!
I'd like to say that Americans got who they voted for, and the principles (or lack thereof) that those candidates espouse, but it's clear that we didn't vote for this.
So Americans now have what they're willing to tolerate.
As long as the class war is de-personalized, imbedded in our economic fabric and generally nameless, it won't provoke a personal/volatile class-war volley in return. At least, that's their gamble.
NMBill, Bush had a lot of help from Congress.
I am offended by the term "Blue Dog" Democrats. They aren't Democrats. They changed their registration from Republican to Democrat. A wolf in sheep's clothing is still a wolf. And they aren't the only ones who follow the money instead of their constituents. Congress is full of people like that, on both sides of the aisle.
This whole debacle is the fault of Congress. They are the ones who deregulated the banking and lending industries. After all, those industries were just carrying out their mission, to make as much money as fast as possible. And damn the torpedoes. They have good reason to expect government to protect them and bail them out. And the hapless citizens, who provide the tax money to be treated like this? In the old USSR days, a Russian joke going around used to be "They pretend to pay us and we pretend to work". Too bad Americans are so cowardly they can't take a page from the French playbook and refuse to work. Just trying to change things by voting is pretty futile, since the corrupt Congress chooses it's successors while the Republicans are stealing elections. Way to go.
For all the Ralph bashing by the Democratic enablers, he's always been right. And always on our side.
Maiden wondered aloud "[the lending industry] are all on the same client destruction path. But what gets me, is why? Where are we supposed to go?"
Well now, where you are supposed to go isn't really their problem now, is it? They got what they wanted; namely, your money. And now your house, too. That was kinda the whole idea at the outset, wasn't it?
It's no accident that the 2005 bankruptcy law was enacted just before the meltdown. We're back to the days of the robber barons.
And you wondered why the rich began building secure, fenced and guarded communities in the late 1980's-early 1990's?
They were getting ready for tommorrow. And you wondered where Blackwater's next assignment was.
since1492 is dead right in the obsrvations.
as he says "hoa binh"
>>But what gets me, is why? Where are we supposed to go?
I believe the answer is the same as when Scarlet O'Hara asked it of Rhett Butler. "Franky, my dear, they don't give a damn."
Their main goal was to steal everything they could. How you would survive wasn't something they factored in.
But, when the shit hits the fan -- and we're far from the worst of it -- at least we'll have the satisfaction of having seen it coming and knowing what was happening to us.
The ones who will be truly miserable are all the Bushites, the enablers, the 24 percenters, the NASCAR dads, all the idiots who helped this come about, grinning and drooling and mocking "liberals." They will be screaming "Why me" as their fingers are pried off the helicopter skids, while the corporatists make their escape.
Helix, you're scary.
And yes, I've thought we are back to the days of the robber barons, but I thought it meant that things had to be turned around. But the only way it happened last time was with a lot of beatings, shootings, and deaths at the hands of the police and Pinkerton. So is that what's coming?
I guess dummy me was hoping for a civilized revolution. Don't laugh at me. I can see America won't wake up until it's too late to be civilized.
Some part of me knew this was coming, back when they started selling Hummers to civilians. I knew that there would be a reason why people would be buying armored vehicles. So they could safely get through unsafe streets. Are we going to end up looking like Baghdad?
Naw, not like Baghdad, more like Mogadishu. Poorer and with more guns.
Parker: I loved the last sentence. Helicopter skids indeed!
Very good article. Unfortuneately, it's very clear that Congress isn't going to do anything constructive. This is not a government of, by, or for the people. They can't even pass the SCHIP bill to help uninsured kids. You think they are going to fix the bankrupsy laws to help the middle class? Dream on. We can all yell til the cows come home (if I had any) but they aren't going to listen. I mean, I'll yell, but I know in advance that it isn't going to do any good. But I'll try....
Class warfare it is, and has been. The problem for the past thirty years or so is that the middle class, gullible and for the most part as greedy as the super-rich, believed they had more in common with the wealthy than with the poor. Wrong!! When the robber barons bled the poorest dry, who did we think they'd come after? Not us. After all, we have 401k's, we have been good corporate soldiers, etc.
Along with science, progressives need to study Marx.
Property is theft!!!
zimmie53, you are right on the mark.
This article is just plain WRONG.
Those getting foreclosed are not the victims. Yes, I feel sorry for them, and yes the bankruptcy laws need to be changed, but they are not victims, except of their own greed. What is the old saying? Buyer beware? Evidently not anymore. the new saying is "It's not my fault I am stupid and greedy".
SO WHO ARE THE REAL VICTIMS? People who have pensions and money markets and IRA's are the real victims. These instruments are heavily invested in CDO's. These people, through no fault of their own, will lose much of their retirement savings.
zimmie53---I agree, you are so right. Not unlike the concentration camp mentality where you watch the weaker get "culled" and keep your head down and say to yourself, " thank God it wasn't me..." It's happened in rural AMerica during the demise of the family farm to be replaced by huge corporate enterprises----true small businesses usurped by the WalMarts and Home Depots.
Just as the shredding of the Constitution, people just refuse to believe it could happen here.
Denial is more than just a river in Egypt.
Clearly they seek to replace the independent freeholder, of any sort, with a renter of some sort.
This is always the case when warlords or empires invade independent people. Europeans were displaced off their ancestral lands when Rome arrived -- or had to pay a tithe to foreign interests in the middle ages (church or crown). By the middle ages they were reduced to serfs. Whites in some parts of Europe were freed not much earlier than blacks in America (Czech. 1848, Russia 1861).
Bottom line, crown has been replaced with a tax subsidized legal/judicial system, and church has been replaced with bank. Millions still remain perpetually landless.
Europe faced a problem with so-called "absentee landlords" a century ago, the intellectual anarchists wrote about it, and America is facing the problem today. We'll be just like Europe before long: basically impossible for young people to buy a house. But the weird part is that our population density is far lower. So who will own most of the land in the US? Nameless corporations, headed by nameless people, based here, there, and everywhere.
Ghengis Khan and warlords of ages gone by couldn't have possibly imagined such a sweet deal. Tribute totally entrenched into the economy, and nameless too.
expatincebu,
This goes far beyond caveat emptor. The whole market shot up -- this caused innocent homeowners to see their tax/property assessments shoot up, and make housing totally unaffordable to young people whose jobs are increasingly offshored as well. This is NOT a simple case of buyer beware. The whole country suffered, except for a few banks which did quite well with short-term pillaging.
It would be just and right for the citizens of the world to strongly consider tearing down the money-changers & their temples. The obfuscation only promotes such response, and lends to it's credibility. sad, but deserved.
""Blue Dog" Democrats from conservative districts sent a letter to House Judiciary Committee chairman John Conyers, asking him to delay considering Miller's bill because it might undermine the provisions of the bankruptcy bill that President Bush signed into law in 2005."
Let's not forget that 19 Democrats in the Senate voted in favor of this bill that was rushed through by a Republican majority in February or March of 2005 while the serious-minded SEC Commissioner, William Donaldson, was opposed to the Bankruptcy Reform bill, undoubtedly realizing that corporate "wrongdoing", as it was called, was still in its infancy stage on Wall Street. William Donaldson later resigned from his job to "spend more time with his family".
It would seem to the average observer that the Blue Dogs are more concerned with saving predatory lenders than saving its victims. Hell, we wouldn't want them to undermine a bill designed to fleece the citizens of this country while the predators walk away unscathed - that would be unpatriotic.
A fiat monetary system allows power and influence to fall into the hands of those who control the creation of new money, and to those who get to use the money or credit early in its circulation. The insidious and eventual cost falls on unidentified victims who are usually oblivious to the cause of their plight. This system of legalized plunder (though not constitutional) allows one group to benefit at the expense of another. An actual transfer of wealth goes from the poor and the middle class to those in privileged financial positions.
~ Congressman Ron Paul (R-TX), Paper Money and Tyranny ________________________________________
Fiat money is the cause of inflation, and the amount which people lose in purchasing power is exactly the amount which was taken from them and transferred to their governments by this process.
~ G. Edward Griffin, The Creature from Jekyll Island
I saw a bumper sticker on the back window of a pickup truck last week. It read:
Kill a Banker for Jesus
First they make it harder to file bankruptcy when people have medical emergencies then they allow student loan companies to jack up interest rates on "federally guaranteed loans". Gee, I wonder why there are so many foreclosures? Corporations seem to have no trouble filing bankruptcy or writing off their debts. Does anyone recall when it was illegal to charge more than 12 percent interest, partly because of biblical references against usury?
There are some very unethical lenders around, due to deregulation, who can count upon the fact that home-ownership is so strongly desired by so many families. Apartment living gets really old after a time,and it's not practical for raising kids. I don't really blame the homebuyers; I recently bought a home for the first time, and it's so complicated, you just have to trust people a lot to not f**k you over. Fortunately, I knew a couple of things--get a fixed rate, and know what you can afford before you look.
I agree that the Bankruptcy deform was one of the worst laws passed in an administration full of bad laws. What I can't figure out is why a seemingly decent fellow like Barack Obama voted for this flapdoodle. I hope somebody would ask him some time.
MOMMY!! THE FREE HAND OF THE MARKET IS TOUCHING ME INAPPROPRIATLY
America is fucked. Get out while you can. I have.
"MOMMY!! THE FREE HAND OF THE MARKET IS TOUCHING ME INAPPROPRIATLY"
Now *that* is funny.
"America is fucked. Get out while you can. I have."
Creates room for all those trying to get in.
I'm surprised the Market even has a free hand, since it is continually shaking the consumer by the heels to get all his/her money.
Maiden,
Banks want customers to prosper, as the bank accumulates as its customers do. Hard to imagine a more direct coupling.
I'd like to see the banks bear a legitimate measure of the downside risk in these aggressive lending schemes. I don't know all the details, but it sure seems the public is financing speculation in banking with these bailouts.
We're still on the post Great Depression model where the sanctity and stability of the banking system is considered inviolable lest the whole economy collapse.
Must be some way to strike a balance here. If the public bears the cost, what is our share of the other side of the ledger?
mirf59,
Banks may want customers to prosper in the way that a farmer wants his livestock to grow big and strong.
There is perpetual profiteering that banks enjoy -- demanding a tithe in exchange for keeping socialized law enforcement away, and not evicting you. And then there is the argument for occasional punctuated profiteering -- slaughter time. They slaughtered people in '29, with family farm foreclosures, with the S&L collapse, and now they're gearing up for homes. Probably they want to roll us back to serfdom.
What would kill lenders forever would be if the majority of people got on top of the equity/inflation game. That is, if they could pass onto their children real estate free and clear. The lenders would barely be needed. They exist only due to the perpetual landless nature of the majority of people.
Real estate pricing just doesn't follow ordinary free market dynamics. If you're in the market for a car, you can get one at several magnitudes. Whatever your taste or budget. You can probably find a $100 car, $1,000, $10,000, $100,000, $1,000,000. 5 orders of magnitude. You can even chose to go without a car altogether. But you have a full range of affordability magnitude.
But real estate and housing only starts out at the high end of affordability, and goes up from there. Why is that?
One would almost be led to conclude that real estate prices are kept racketed up artificially by the lending "industry", speculators, etc. Always just out of reach, to prevent large segments of America from ever coming into real equity ownership and passing it onto their children.
They'd prefer something along the lines of the serf model. I'm toying with a spoof web site idea. I've got something better than the 50 year mortgage. Even better than a 75 year mortgage. How about this:
the New Transgenerational Mortgage. Guaranteed to keep your monthly payment low. Buy that dream home NOW! Your unborn grandkids will be legally obliged to keep making payments after you're dead and gone -- but they'll be hosed anyway. Buy now! Enjoy the American Dream again! Call 666-6666 for details!"
"Kill a Banker for Jesus"
Wow. That makes me want to get baptized all over again!
And it seems that all we, the little people, can expect from the invisible hand is a reach-around.
"What I can't figure out is why a seemingly decent fellow like Barack Obama voted for this flapdoodle. I hope somebody would ask him some time."
Because he is a corporate whore, decent fellow or not. We need to stop looking at politicians in terms of their personalities (i.e., I'd love to have a cold one with Bush) and examine them in terms of why owns them.