Thursday, March 5, 2009

Obama's Housing Rescue Plan and the Responsible Homeowner

There is an uproar in the air.

Rants like the ones by the (in)famous Rick Santelli, has people up in arms, about not wanting to pay for their neighbor's mortgage. Rick's rant reminds me of the Sudanese people who protested the International Criminal Court's arrest warrant for their President, who has been accused of committing war crimes and genocide against the people of Darfur. The depths of ignorance that encourages such great manipulation is stunning. That the very same people whose friends, neighbors and relatives have been the target of genocide, now protest the arrest warrant of the person who is responsible for the genocide, is at best very sad and at worst, another crime of exploitation against the ignorant. Like the Sudanese, some of our people are being misled, once again, by the likes of Rick Santelli. I know the example of manipulation and exploitation I gave above is hard-hitting, but the point is this: we shouldn't miss the forest for the trees. Let us not cut off our noses to spite our face.

Obama's plan to rescue homeowners who are stuck in high interest, fancy mortgages that they are unable to pay has gotten a lot of people's (especially Republicans!) knickers in a bunch. Many have said that they do not want to rescue irresponsible people who have taken out a larger mortgage than they can afford or bought a larger house than they can afford.

For one second, lets set aside the fact that the taxpayer is rescuing irresponsible banks and financial companies to the tune of many billions, even though many have knowingly sold bad mortgages to people by misleading, mis-stating or misinforming them. That is a debate for another blog post.

Even if the American taxpayer was not rescuing the banks and financial industries, I would still recommend we stand by Obama's plan to rescue the distressed homeowner.

Why do I say this? It is not because I stand to gain personally. No, I will not benefit from Obama's plan, so there is no vested interest here. The reason I support Obama's plan, even though it is not perfect, is this: If there is ever a chance that the housing market recovers and by virtue of its tight interconnection, the financial markets recover, the only hope is to stem the foreclosures.

The banks which are opposing or dampening the extent of Obama's homeowner rescue package are continuing to exhibit the very same behavior that caused this collapse: that of greed, selfishness and short term mercenary avarice. What they do not understand is this: foreclosure benefits no one. NO ONE!. Not even the neighbor who has been very meticulous is paying his mortgage, very responsible in buying the home he can afford and who now resents having to rescue someone he considers irresponsible.

When a home in a neighborhood goes into foreclosure, all the bank is interested in, is to retrieve the principal they put into it. The homeowner might have had about 10% or 20% invested in the home. But the bank will very easily price the home down to get it off its books. What does that do to a neighbor's home, the one who has been responsibly paying his mortgage? It automatically brings the value of his house down to match that of the foreclosure. In the end, as more foreclosures hit a neighborhood, the value of all the properties go down - it no longer matters if they are foreclosed or not.

So it is in the best interest of ALL of us, even those who have been religious about paying our mortgages, to stem foreclosures. The money spent will eventually benefit EVERYONE, not just the ones who are being rescued.

And Obama's plan, tries to achieve some of it (provided the banks don't lobby the House and Senate to add their riders to mangle the plan.)

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

This is a very nicely written article!
I hope there are more like this and that this helps all those out there who have kept their mouth shut while billions have been poured into the very same financial institutions who are at the heart of this global crisis. It is amazing that people are up in arms, based on misleading information, about the only measure that, if implemented without lobbying influence, might be helping the general public and, which as your blog rightly clarifies, has the chance of helping our economy, that is VERY HEAVILY dependent on consumer spending, by providing some sense of stability for all homeowners.

Jaya said...

Thank you Zac. Yes, it is amazing that people blindly follow whatever the media feeds them. If we only take time to think through, we'll understand that we are being led to the slaughter house, like we have been led these past 8 years under Bush.

Anonymous said...

why are Americans so surprised that the mainstream media has filtered information? I was taught that journalist should not take either side, but report as good as they can - on 2 sides of a story. Because that`s where normally the truth lies. During the Bush era, I - a native German - lived in the USA and always made sure I got my information not only from the german mainstream media, but worldwide. Being trilingual is a huge bonus, trust you me. But even if you only speak one language, don`t be so naive and believe all that the t.v. set or people in the media suggest. These days, the American news-networks have more personal opinions and commentaries than we all need. Fair and balanced? thikn again, if a station has to plaster that slogan in itself to its viewers it`s as htough they are trying to convince us all and themselves that this is truly a fact. but as an ally of Israel, americans so often depict people of Palestine as evil and terrorist, yet we turn a blind eye to both sides of the conflict.

Same is true for the housing industry. My husband wokrs in car sales and my family felt the effects long before anybody else was hit so hard. Folks looked puzzled when we criticized how easy it was for almost anyone to apply and receive credit, for folks to be able to buy homes without down-payment and the fact that from one day to another, our home loan was sold to another loan company... which had a whole new set of rules for us, despite the fact that luckily, we settled for a fixed credit. But I do remember when we were house-shopping, the so-called "arm" loan was lucrative business. Information and education is key. Why do we allow crdit card companies (or military recreuiters) to set up shop in from of our high-schools and colleges? I view myself as an American, having lived 11 years in maryland, but I have always rejected some of the methods, some industries of businesses diplay. as consumers, we have the right to reject and fight back but in order to be able to do so, one has to carefully do some investigating. In my opinion, this starts with our next generation, everybody wants credit, few people, especially young folks know how to balance a check-book or how their credit rating is comprised or what theirs looks like. Teach them early in school and parents, educate your kids.

Jaya said...

DJ,

Thank you for your comment. You make very good points: esp the one about why Military recruiters and credit card companies are allowed to set up shop in high schools and colleges. Thank you for the insight.

Jaya