by sniglet » Wed Feb 11, 2009 12:51 pm
I blame society at large. I think it is innacurate to put all the blame on Wall Street, or even government officials and regulators. Society as a whole had become bullish, and was willing to throw caution to the wind in a massive credit boom.
Can you blame an appraiser for using overly optimistic assumptions in their estimates when they would have lost their job if they didn't (i.e. no one would bring them business if they couldn't meet the numbers)? Can you blame brokers for giving loans to people who couldn't afford them when there were investors snapping up real-estate securities who really didn't care about the quality of the borrowers in the underlying mortgages?
I had countless conversations with relatives and colleagues over the last decade where people would brag about how rich they were getting as their homes appreciated, and excoriating me for not buying since "prices only go up", and that my notions of trying to keep a small debt load were just silly. If anything, I have MORE sympathy for a Wall Street executive who presided over the collapse of her institution than I do for the home owner who over-extended himself. The Wall Street executive can legitimately say they would have been fired (by shareholders) if they hadn't stepped on the gravy train of fabulous profits (while it lasted). But there was no gun to the head of any individual who opted to buy some over-priced piece of suburbia by lying about their income on a mortgage application. Renting was ALWAYS a good (and affordable) option.
By the way, I have a blog posting about where I place the blame.
Last edited by
sniglet on Wed Feb 11, 2009 2:41 pm, edited 2 times in total.