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Henry Paulson's Priorities
By Bush administration standards, Henry Paulson, the Treasury secretary, is a good guy. He isn't conspicuously incompetent; and he isn't trying to mislead us into war, justify torture or protect corrupt contractors.
But Mr. Paulson's actions reflect the priorities of the administration he serves. And that, ultimately, is what's wrong with the mortgage relief plan he unveiled last week.
The plan is, as a Times editorial put it yesterday, "too little, too late and too voluntary." But from the administration's point of view these failings aren't bugs, they're features.
In fact, there's a growing consensus among financial observers that the Paulson plan isn't mainly intended to achieve real results. The point is, instead, to create the appearance of action, thereby undercutting political support for actual attempts to help families in trouble.
In particular, the Paulson plan is probably an attempt to take the wind out of Barney Frank's sails. Mr. Frank, the Democratic chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, has sponsored legislation that would give judges in bankruptcy cases the ability to rewrite mortgage loan terms. But "Bankers Hope Bush Subprime Plan Will Scuttle House Bill," as a headline in CongressDaily put it.
As Elizabeth Warren, the Harvard bankruptcy expert, puts it, "The administration's subprime mortgage plan is the bank lobby's dream." Given the Bush record, that should come as no surprise.
There are, in fact, three distinct concerns associated with the rising tide of foreclosures in America.
One is financial stability: as banks and other institutions take huge losses on their mortgage-related investments, the financial system as a whole is getting wobbly.
Another is human suffering: hundreds of thousands, and probably millions, of American families will lose their homes.
Finally, there's injustice: the subprime boom involved predatory lending - high-interest loans foisted on borrowers who qualified for lower rates - on an epic scale. The Wall Street Journal found that more than 55 percent of subprime loans made at the height of the housing bubble "went to people with credit scores high enough to often qualify for conventional loans with far better terms."
And in a declining housing market, these victims are stuck, unable to refinance.
So there are three problems. But Mr. Paulson's plan - or, to use its official name, the Hope Now Alliance plan - is entirely focused on reducing investor losses. Any minor relief it might provide to troubled borrowers is clearly incidental. And it is does nothing for the victims of predatory lending.
The plan sets voluntary guidelines under which some, but only some, borrowers whose mortgage payments are set to rise may get temporary relief.
This is supposed to help investors, because foreclosing on a house is expensive: there are big legal fees, and the house normally sells for less than the value of the mortgage. "Foreclosure is to no one's benefit," said Mr. Paulson in a White House interactive forum. "I've heard estimates that mortgage investors lose 40 to 50 percent on their investment if it goes into foreclosure."
But won't the borrowers gain, too? Not if the planners can help it. Relief is restricted to borrowers whose mortgage debt is at least 97 percent of the house's value - which means that in many, perhaps most, cases those who get debt relief will be borrowers who owe more than their house is worth. These people would be nearly as well off in financial terms if they simply walked away.
And what about people with good credit who were misled into bad mortgage deals, who should have been steered to loans with better terms? They get nothing: the Paulson plan specifically excludes borrowers with good credit scores. In fact, the plan actually provides an incentive for some people to miss debt payments, because that would make them look like bad credit risks and eligible for relief.
Now, Mr. Paulson's attempt to help investors, while doing little or nothing for distressed and defrauded borrowers, might make sense if his plan would reduce investor losses enough to seriously improve the overall financial situation.
But only a small fraction of subprime borrowers will qualify for relief, and many of these borrowers will eventually face foreclosure anyway. So the plan is unlikely to reduce overall mortgage-related losses by more than a few percent, at most - not enough to make any real difference to financial stability. Indeed, interest-rate spreads that have been signaling a crisis of confidence in the financial system didn't narrow at all when the plan was announced.
Still, you might say that the Paulson plan is better than nothing. But the relevant alternative isn't nothing; it's a plan that - like Barney Frank's proposal - would actually help working families. And that's what the administration is trying to avoid.
Paul Krugman is Professor of Economics at Princeton University and a regular New York Times columnist. His most recent book is The Conscience of a Liberal.
© 2007 The New York Times
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30 Comments so far
Show AllWell put Skippy: "It was funny, but not a joke."
And Don, I am sorry but I would rather put my tax dollars (were I American) on the people who got talked into these idiotic mortgages. When considering a recent poll from the US, I believe that many would not know how to analyse and decipher the fine print in mortgages, nor ask the right questions. The poll (sorry, no link for it, it was a couple of months ago in Canadian press), stated that at least 90% of Americans were 'functionally' illiterate, meaning; they could not analyse what they read. Go figure! I do agree that I would not be inclined to pay for the gougers who did the talking!
As Klugman states though, politicians are very good at 'framing' their words to appear as just and working for the populace. Harpie won partly on his campaign to reduce our GST (goods & services tax)by one percent! Wow, one cent on the dollar; translates to one dollar on a hundred spent. Big savings, indeed. However, Canadians do not appear to be big on math either, so they said, "Cool!" and voted the idiot in.
It became clear long ago that Bush would rather sell his mother, his wife, and his daughters into slavery than ever support any policy that could possibly help the non-wealthy more than it helps the wealthy. He screams in pain at the thought.
Thank goodness Paul Krugman has the intellectual fortitude to examine the details of the President's most recent decoy. Not many of us could even stay awake reviewing the fine print of an economic proposal.
There was an article on Smirking Chimp by Fred - can't remember the last name, writes about economic issues anyhow - he claimed the number of people helped by the morgage bailout proposed by bush would equal the number of men who could become pregnant.
It was funny, but not a joke.
I have been trying to stay up on this with all the peripheral fall-out, but I am having difficulty. ON the one hand, if you made a stupid financial decision that causes you to lose your house, I empathize with you, but I'm not sure I want to have to pay my tax dollars to help bail you out.
Same goes for folks who didn't read the papers they signed within the alotted 3 days. If you got baited and switched, it still should not be my problem.
Now for the banks and schemers who either duped folks or tried to gain wealth off of someone else's misfortune or ignorance or??? whatever the reason: I don't think I should have to help you either. Foreclose on that house. Try to sell it yourself, and have your investors foot that bill, not me.
I am sick and tired of the moneyed elite in this country playing footloose and fancy free with other people's money and then getting off scott-free when the bill comes due. Jail time and big financial resets seem to be required here.
Does anyone else feel this way besides me? How can we opt out of publicly financing this/yet another (S&L was the prior one I remember) debacle?
Home Prices need to come back in line with income fundamentals. Things are way overinflated and people can no longer afford to buy. A bailout will only make this worse. I do feel for people who are about to lose their homes. But I will say plenty of people pressured my husband and I to buy and I am sure some pitied us that we weren't in a house a few years ago. We've waited on the sidelines until we could purchase something we could afford with a fixed rate.
www.patrick.net is a good resource on the housing bubble.
Hey Kivals
Well Put.
Wonder if any Bedouins in Iraq would be buying, now that Uda and Kusa are gone.
Who know what would happen to them then? Georgie would not be bothered.
Love
Zero
"The point is, instead, to create the appearance of action..."
You mean, like, the "surge?"
Or "campaign finance reform?"
Or "election reform?"
Or Annapolis?
Or "There is no way to imagine America without New Orleans, and this great city will rise again."
Or "If there's a leak out of my administration, I want to know who it is," Bush told reporters at an impromptu news conference during a fund-raising stop in Chicago, Illinois. "If the person has violated law, that person will be taken care of."
The appearance of action in order to cover the real action, which is always, always, the exact opposite of the appearance.
I have/am paying a hell of a lot of my tax dollars on things worse than a "bailout" for imprudent mortgage holders.
Fear not those of you who don't want to help those people who bought more than they could afford or couldn't read the fine print (I always read every word of every document that I signed while buying a home -NOT, didn't you?).
Krugman outlines some of the hurdles these bailout recipients face and Everbank's daily currencies email outlined a few more:
"The plan only covers those who took out mortgages for the beginning of
2005 through the end of this July, and haven't been delinquent on their
payments. Homeowners who've already sacrificed to pay the higher
"reset" interest rates won't get help. Nor will those who have missed"
mortgage payments, have already lost their homes, or obtained mortgages
before or after the approved dates.
There aint gonna be much of a bailout for the consumer.
It sounds like Bush is playing front-man or a PR duty to international investors. His job is to make it look like we're keeping expansion (i.e. extortion of people's wages) humming along at full tilt, and to ensure that international banks continue to buy more of America's future.
In other words, his job is to sell the country off...
Anyone catch that Swiss USB bank wrote down $10 billion on sub-prime losses, but got emergency capitol from "an unnamed Middle Eastern investor".
If Joe Sixpacks would set aside his beer & Limbaugh for a minute, he might eventually come to conclude that the US is being sold off to the Japanese, Chinese, wealthy European investors, and "unnamed" Middle Easterners, while we're being hosed by the Federal Reserve. Need money? Print some more up. Got too much? Fiddle the interest rates. Must be nice.
And, furthermore, that we can't blame these foreign countries/investors. They're doing what investors do: make money.
We can only blame our politicians -- they don't work for We The People. They may never have done so. It might be an oxymoron to their very profession.
Hey folks, don't get your knickers in a knot about this "bailout". It ain't going nowhere. It is IMPOSSIBLE to implement. Want to know what this is really about? Go to this link and scroll down to "Dec 10, 2007 - Spirit of the Season". http://www.kunstler.com/
Merry Xmas!
Come on, Kivals, Bush wouldn't sell his mother, she's probably the only person in the world he's afraid of.
Don the Engineer, how nice that you read 27 pages of fine print before you sign, but most people trust that they're not being screwed when they sign house documents. Some of those people were lied to, and some of the lies were lies of omission. Some of the people were unaware of what questions to ask. There was predatory lending. There was steering into unjustified higher interest terms. The point is that we're all in this together (even you) and there's enough people going down to sink the whole ship.
For all the posters complaining about using tax dollars to bail out stupid borrowers: This is a red herring.
Neither the Bush proposal nor the Barney Frank one involve spending any federal tax dollars. Both involve readjusting what borrowers pay to lenders. It's the lenders (and the investors who bought out the lenders' positions, hoping for fat earnings) who stand to lose, which is why they are screaming in opposition.
This distinguishes these proposals from, say, the Federal tax dollars (billions) that bailed out the Savings and Loans (including the one owned by First Brother Neil Bush) in the 1990s. If you're huge, well-connected, and stupid or fraudulent, you get bailed out with government money. If you're little, powerless, and defrauded, you don't.
If the taxpayers end up covering the motgages these homes should then be publicly owned. Needy families should then be housed in these properties. Rents should be based on incomes. Monies received from rents should be used to provide city or county services. How about using the rents to fund local radio and television stations. Part of the programing must educate listeners on fraudulent polititions and corrupt corporate business practices.
Wow! Great thought Hounddog. If more people thought like you, we wouldn't have so much poverty.
Establish a Federal 'Credit' Insurance Corp.
.
2006 Wall Street bonuses; $25 Billion. 2007 Sub prime losses: $25 billion.
As the big boys on Wall Street direct trillions in capital flows to derivatives, rank speculation and the latest hot packaged products like sub-prime mortgages they whet their beaks, like the mob, at every turn.
Why not place a one one hundreth of a per cent safety/insurance fee on these flows to fund the financial and social dislocation costs caused by the the financial industry's recurring greed driven excesses?
It would be a manifest boon to American workers who toil at multiple jobs to create this capital and certainly smooth out a glaring repititious economic pratfall.
The banks and major financial institutions go on binges as a matter of their nature. REITS, Latin American lending, S&Ls;, hi-tech bubble and now sub prime loans have each wiped out an enormous amount of the financial industry's equity capital. To rebuild equity, subsequent financial instruments such as car loans, mortgages and credit cards must carry higher profit margins. Thus Jane and John Doe have to pay a penalty to rebuild this equity base.
We know these binges occur and have a deposit insurance mechanism in place (the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp -FDIC) which forces the bankers to set aside emergency money so that the deposit base of banks and their customers will not evaporate.
Likewise we need a Federal Credit Insurance Corp so that when these binges wipe out financial equity there is a source of credit (i.e.loans) available.
Banks do two things. They hold deposits and they offer loans. We insure that these bingers will not take American's deposits with them as they go bust from time to time. Why not extract a minuscule fee from each credit offering in order that the availability of credit will not be so totally hemorrhaged as to affect gross interest rates, the dollar's standing, prices and inflation?
Don The Engineer: Does anyone else feel this way besides me?
Yep - you pretty much outlined my thoughts on the whole matter.
A speculative investment - by definition - is one where you expect to make money not off dividends but off the price going up - IOW: shifting it to some other poor sucker before the bubble bursts. Houses do not generate income. Therefore, as an "investment", they are entirely and completely a speculative one. That houses tap into that instinctive nest-building urge makes no difference. A house is not a working investment and never will be.
Now … what's true for individuals is true of society as a whole (in this case, anyway). An enormous chunk of national effort has been sunk into something that cannnot generate a working return. Houses, insted of farms, mines, manufacturing plants. Houses that just sit there in tracts, housing people. A nation that does this will ruin itself, no matter the specifics of the laws, societical structures or financial instruments by which it is done.
Keep an eye on the real economy.
People that bought a house just to have one as large and fancy as their friends and neighbors have with no idea how they might make the payments are to be pitied. Material things do not bring happiness, just status, unil the bankruptcy comes. Perhaps if they would reflect on the type of living standards their ancestors got along with it might bring a little perspective to their thinking. People that lived in sod houses and log cabins were probably as happy with their life as many of today`s citizens as they had purpose in their lives rather than playing keep up. There is more satisfaction in living within your means than in living dangerously.
Kernel: You've identified a huge problem in our culture. But it doesn't just apply to our homes. It applies to everything we do if we insist on being consumers instead of citizens. I has to do with honoring wealth instead of work. As long as there is one hungry person on the planet, we will starve because of our greed and selfishness.
But this freight train is already gathering speed and heading straight for a brick wall. I am now just spending my energies and buying power to get prepared for the fallout of this mess. And helping my friends and neighbors do the same.
Class War!
Good posting PaulM there is no real economy. Its a shell game based entirely on debt.
How did loans or insurance policies ever become known as "products"? Certainly, from a lender's or insurance company's perspective they are cash cows. From the buyer's perspective, they're more like a cancer.
It'll be interesting to see who can buy these Boomer-inflated homes. The X/Y Gen whose jobs have been outsourced? The illegals who are working sub-minimum wage?
Maybe real estate will generally be owned by the banks, foreign and domestic, a great rollback of the 1862 Homestead Act. And we'll be like Europe: all but impossible for young people to ever own property.
Things are not always what they seem to be.
Consider that Paulson as CEO of Goldman Sachs received a 18.7 million good bye bonus for 6 months of work as he left for his job as Secretary of Treasury in 2006.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-sirota/the-paulson-payoff-at-the_b_24379.html
Consider also that Goldman Sachs announced they shorted sub-prime mortgages, and are siad to have done so since 2004, and stand to do well.
http://www.wikinvest.com/concept/Subprime_lending
Obviously a coincidence, but shades of Cheney/Halliburton .
In any event, everyone knew housing was a bubble that needed to be popped. The sub-primes were a tool that made it easy for speculators to make the bubble bigger, and the securitization of these loans made bankers willing to make the bad loans since they were selling the risk to others. Something had to give.
Who were the sub-prime borrowers?
Speculators who would then sell at a profit in 1-2 years
Those refinancing to pay their credit card debts and to be able to pay the off their fixed rate prime mortgage, and they did not qualify for a prime loan because they were not working or their income was reduced, or their income was dirty money.
Those who would have got FHA loans, mainly poor blacks and hispanics, so less risk for government, even though FHA loans had much lower foreclosure rates than sub-primes because they could only borrow what they could afford to pay for.
Why did they do this to the poor critters and make a bubble just to pop it? Because bubbles and their subsequent bursting provide opportunities for the elite to rob the middle class, and in this case, also the lower class. Does anyone really think the big guys are getting too badly hurt here?. I mean, 10 billion loss for a UBS just means 10 billion less in their total profits, and less taxes they will need to pay, our government borrows this amount of money every week, and when they really are short and can not wait for the government bailout, some Arab oil men comes to the rescue and charges them 11% interest for the bailout.
Also, market corrections or crashes are good opportunities for those with money to make more money down the road, even if they get hit with a short term loss. The financial elite that did get hurt and do not need to pay 11% interest to the sheiks get bailed out by the critters government sooner or later, they scream in pain following each crisis and threatening to withold credit from the markets as they are doing now, and then we borrow more from China and OPEC which earns the Fed more money, then when housing it hits bottom, and they know when the bottom is hit, they buy low and start another bubble.
Thats one of the function of the Fed, to maintain a cycle of bubbles and their popping so their share owners can make more money. They popped one housing bubble in the late 80's, and 20 years laters, they do it again.
Despite the cries of anguish they still passed off a lot of those bonds to suckers already. China has 107 billion in mortgage bonds and our Secretary of HUD tried to convince the Chinese to invest in more of them last summer, to their great amusement.
So whats the worst case here. A crash in the housing markets, say a 30% drop nationwide will likely put us in a Depression, and probably the rest of the world goes into recession. Depressions are a good excuse for a World War to get the economy on it's feet again. Last Depression was in 1929, also arranged by the Fed. It gave FDR and opportunity to finish off what was left of our Republic with the New Deal, among other things.
Here is a part of FDR's 1933 inauguration speech near the end.
"I am prepared under my constitutional duty to recommend the measures that a stricken nation in the midst of a stricken world require.
These measures, or such other measures as the Congress may build out of it's experience and wisdom, I shall seek, within my constitutional authority.
But in the event Congress shall fail to take one of these two courses, and in the event the national emergency is still critical, I shall not evade the clear course of duty that will confront me (anyone detect the whiff of unitary executive here?)
I shall ask Congress for the one remaining instrument to meet the crisis-broad executive power tgo wage a war against the emergency as great as the power that would be given me if we were in fact invaded by a foreign foe
(to be used against domestic foes, which is what the War Powers Act of 1917 as amended 1933 did give him and it is still in effect today, and so the Executive Orders began to fly and continue)."
And the rest is history (but not the one that is taught in school, one of the tax free foundations took care of that).
So ask yourself?. Why did the Fed increase interest rates knowing what they knew about the sub-primes and the fact that the issues behind rising inflation (real numbers) were rising oil prices, are not sensitive to domestic interest rates, and that every time oil has spiked like it has, history has shown this always leads to a global recession, when you would want lower rates. That was really what triggered the current crisis. They could have let the bubble continue and then pop it when Hillary took over.
Oh, it must be some combination of mistakes, accidents and coincidences and not the evils of an unregulated market. Can't be a conspiracy to bankrupt America and make the rich richer and an excuse for WW III, conspiracies do not exist, don't you know, you silly critters you.
Maybe Hillary will be the new FDR?
"Maybe Hillary will be the new FDR?"
LMFAO.
Bend Over for Bush
From Mr.Krugman, a commentary of acceptable quality, as far it goes - and I thank him for it - but then there are these three sentences:
"There are, in fact, three distinct concerns associated with the rising tide of foreclosures in America.
"One is financial stability: as banks and other institutions take huge losses on their mortgage-related investments, the financial system as a whole is getting wobbly.
"Another is human suffering: hundreds of thousands, and probably millions, of American families will lose their homes.
"Finally, there's injustice: the subprime boom involved predatory lending - high-interest loans foisted on borrowers who qualified for lower rates - on an epic scale. The Wall Street Journal found that more than 55 percent of subprime loans made at the height of the housing bubble "went to people with credit scores high enough to often qualify for conventional loans with far better terms.
And in a declining housing market, these victims are stuck, unable to refinance."
Contrast with those lines the revolutionary subtitle of E.F. Schumacher's classic book on "appropriate technologies," and economic miniaturism, "Small Is Beautiful" from the kooky -- but pardoxically, far saner -- 1970s. That subtitle reads: "ECONOMICS AS IF PEOPLE MATTERED."
Mr. Krugman's economics give people secondary or even tertiary - sometimes not even that much - consderation to banking - and bankers. It was ever thus among the commentators of the New York Times - right up the the world-changing Great Crash of 1929 and well into the Great Depression that Crash helped to cause. And it is that way this very day at this newspaper of markedly-declining circulation and general reader interest.
So what, I wonder, are Mr. Krugman's commentaries doing as regular contributions on a so-called "progressive" news site, Commondreams? The non-threatening - if teeth-grindingly boring and superficially informative - "Daily Kos" or "Wonkette" websites would be better regular venues for him.
I suggest that the reader of my post check out instead the World Socialist Website, starting with this brilliant, socially-concerned analysis http://www.wsws.org/articles/2007/dec2007/subp-d07.shtml and then proceding to the four associated links at the bottom of that wsws page for more summary news stories - from which you will get more information on what's going on in the sub-prime bailout than any similar number of Paul Krugman's columns.
(Please note that the World Socialist Website - brilliant and socially conscientious as its news and commentaries items are - is NOT included on the homepage of Commondreams as a preferred web link.)
Mr. Krugman's commentaries fail to meet up with that Schumacher standard of a human-being-dedicated economics repeatedly. That means that his world-view is stalled out somewhere around the year 1890, when Herbert Spencer held sway as a sage among the comfortable bourgeoisie in the West. That dog-eat-dog "liberal" worldview gave us the First World War, and set the stage for extremist fascism and Stalinist communism in the economically calamitous decades which followed as a direct consequence of that Great War.
So far as I can tell, Mr. Krugman is merely a vocal, Bush-baiting appendage of the "Liberal End of Wall Street" - "enlightened financiers and investment bankers" - folks whose ancestors were the Wall Street bankers who bought off what passed for a Manhattan-based "Literary Left," and founded the New Republic and sponsored Herbert Croly in the 1920s.
The story is told in Carroll Quiqley's "Tragedy and Hope: The History of the World in Our Time," published by a renowned history and social science publisher, the MacMillan Company, during those culturally turbulent years of the late 1960s. Professor Quigley, who died in the early 1970s, taught for several decades a very popular course in the history of civilization for years at the conservative Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service, scarcely a hive of left or radical thinking. Bill Clinton was among his students.
The entire volume of "Tragedy and Hope" is now available in .pdf format at www.archive.org , along with all of Carroll Quigley's other major works.
But a simple web search of Carroll Quigley and Croly will bring up this page:
http://sovereignjohn.wordpress.com/carroll-quigley-tragedy-and-hope-2/
Search "steam" (as in the expression "blow off steam")using the "Find" function on the upper left "Edit" menu on your browser on that linked page, and you will get on that page linked in the paragraph just above, Quigley's "fly-on-the-wall" story of how Wall Street, led by Willard Straight, bought off the American "Literary Left" in the first decades of the 20th century.
Quigley's tale is a great read - but his 1300-page book, as the New York Times book review of it published around the time it was published pointed out, reliese on secondary souces, and lacks any annotation or bibliography and therefore, readable as it is, cannot be classed as first-class historical scholarship. His tale of a Wall Street buyout of the "Literary Left" needs independent corroboration, in other words.
But something along the lines of what Quigley reported did, I believe from all my other reading and experience, happen in the 20s , and there are, even down to the present day, so-called "Left" and "Liberal" commentators in the daily and weekly print media who are, for the most part, "protective critics" of "Enlightened Wall Steet," and I think Mr. Krugman is a good candidate for this category, as are some contributors to "The American Prospect Magazine," the prime national journal of "Kennedy Liberalism."
Nevertheless, it is heartening to at least read a criticism of a Wall Street alumnus in Mr. Krugman's columns - even if Mr. Paulson, the man he criticizes, hails from the "unenlightened," "Republican End" of Wall Street.
"Henry Paulson's Priorities" -- Where are they?
Do we really need to spell it out? He was CEO of Goldman Sachs! That should tell you where his priorities are.
Good call cyboman1.
I'm with you on this one.
Unfortunately, great number of people have been lobotomized into thinking that "Socialism" is bad. One needs to read actual books to realize that Socialism means "What is good for the society" and Capitalism means "What is good for the money". It's as simple as that.
Just finished reading Amy Goodman's article "From Oil Wars to Water Wars".
She actually states that the "markets" are somewhat happy with melting polar ice caps.
Apparently, it's going to open some new profitable shipping lanes.
Go figure.
As for Paul Krugman. He knows what he's talking about. Clever guy with great insight. One problem only. He's a willing slave to Democratic party.
Buy gold. Never forget the gifts of the Magi.