by TJ_98370 » Tue Mar 18, 2008 2:20 pm
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Bailing out Bear Stearns Cos. won't address the falling home prices and tide of foreclosures that will continue to plague the economy, some observers said Monday.
Consumers remain in an environment where nothing substantial has been done to prevent foreclosures, said Jim Carr, chief operating officer of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition. The Bear Stearns deal highlights the need for faster action on legislation to enable the widespread modification of bad loans, consumer advocates say, and the importance of improving related asset quality.
"It's almost stunning to witness the shoring up of a major financial institution, but not addressing the problem that the quality of housing assets is deteriorating with each minute we wait," Carr said.
Kurt Eggert, a law professor at Chapman University's School of Law in Orange, Calif., and a former member of the Fed's consumer advisory council, said the Bear deal shows the "growing disconnect between the Bush administration's willingness to help Wall Street and its willingness to aid the homeowners facing foreclosure."
A plan to reduce foreclosures should be the top priority, he said, as defaults and foreclosures have been at the root of the subprime crisis.
"Of all the investment houses, Bear Stearns was the one most deserving of going under because of the subprime crisis, both for its ownership of a subprime lender and its work packaging those loans," Eggert said. "However, the Feds are doing more to help Bear Stearns than the borrowers facing foreclosure because of Bear Stearns actions." .......
.....Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, said a number of proposals that are geared toward helping homeowners facing foreclosure will actually benefit banks and other holders of bad mortgage debt -- institutions that could "earn tens of billions of dollars at taxpayer expense." He added that owning can be much more expensive than renting.
"It's really infuriating for me that we pushed low- and moderate-income people to buy overpriced houses with really bad mortgages," he said. "And even now, after it's proven so disastrous, you have politicians that still can't take two minutes and think for a second that maybe it's not a good idea for everyone to be homeowner regardless of what price they're buying at."
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And what will probably become one of my all time favorite quotes ----
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