Marginal Utility

Dealing with contemporary consumerism, capitalism, and the life it permits.

 

18 March 2008

Enemies of the ownership society

Anger seems to be building about the imminent government bailout of the players and institutions caught up in the burst housing bubble. BusinessWeek‘s recession roundup piece this week touches on the brewing unrest (though only to make them seem a bit like wild-eyed radicals):

The airwaves and blogosphere are alive with people who say nothing should be done. They argue that intervening now would only delay the inevitable liquidation of credit-fueled excesses. “Under proposed bailouts, responsible people lose and have to give their money to gamblers, liars, and sleazy lenders,” says the widely followed Patrick.net housing blog.

This fury makes for the possibility of an otherwise unlikely shift in political orientation for the non-homeowning chumps who are going to end up being punished for their circumspection during the bubble’s inflation. Latte-sipping liberals like myself are ordinarily unlikely to pay much attention to the government-hating complaints of libertarians, but this passage from economist Arnold Kling at Econlog seemed to strike a chord with me:

There was some predatory borrowing going on in addition to predatory lending. And the worst lending mistakes were made by the least regulated segment of the market. So you have inexperienced amateur real estate speculators getting financing from Rolex-wearing mortgage brokers who sell the loans to 24-year-old Beamer-driving Wall Street investment bankers. Why can’t the rest of us just sit back and watch them all get what they deserve?
Instead, we get the Treasury and Congress coming up with “plans” to rewrite mortgages. These brilliant solutions contribute to making the mortgage securities market totally illiquid, because now nobody has any idea what the cash flows are going be under the (make them up as you go along) rules.

Earlier in this crisis, when the Fed was not handing out billions to investment bankers, I would have scoffed at the phrase predatory borrowing as a conservative sophism designed to conceal how ignorant but hopeful first-time buyers were led into deep water by unscrupulous mortgage brokers. The state, the media, and business all linked arms to tout home ownership as the only legitimate path to bourgeois security and fulfillment of the true American dream (the “ownership society"), and then aflame with that ideology, eventual subprime borrowers scrambled to get themselves some of that sweet home equity. Who could blame them? The abuses of the lending industry were so egregious, it was easy to overlook the overreaching by borrowers who were just trying to live the dream that had been foisted on them.

Seemingly everyone endorsed this program—the state, the banks, the press, your friends and neighbors—so now the sentiment appears to be that everyone should pitch in to clean up now that the program has been revealed to be a total mess. The housing bubble was a shared social problem that derived from people with laudable intentions but misguided methods. That’s BusinessWeek’s view:

There’s a social aspect, too. Concentrated foreclosures, voluntary and otherwise, can destroy neighborhoods because abandonment increases decay and crime. And the housing crash undermines the social compact. “Talk about the rich vs. the poor was to some extent buffered by rising house prices. Now all you have to do is stare at your paycheck and your negative home equity,” frets University of Chicago Graduate School of Business economist Raghuram G. Rajan.

But I am having a harder and harder time accepting that “social compact”, or maintaining sympathy for borrowers in over their heads in homes (which incidentally have destroyed the countryside in which I was raised) that have far more space than they need. They were under ideological pressure to keep up, but somehow I resisted. If the housing problems exacerbates tensions between rich and poor, that might even be a good thing for getting some measures through to ameliorate income inequality in general. But instead we are getting measures that are worsening it.

So I agree with Kling when he writes this:

The people who most deserve to be in homes now are the people who decided in 2005 and 2006 that they could not afford the then-prevailing house prices or who decided to at least wait to accumulate a down payment. If you can sort out the predatory borrowers from the victims of predatory lenders sufficiently well to identify the latter, then the best thing that you can do with taxpayer money is to write checks for those victims.
The way I see it, government has served primarily to prolong and exacerbate the problem.

Sadly, there is little solace at this point in feeling like a smarty-pants for staying out of trouble and being resistant to the dominant ideology, when those in trouble are still getting the love and attention from the government in the form of tax breaks and handouts and, now, most likely, bailouts. It’s becoming easier and easier to lump the borrowers in with the brokers and bankers who exploited the dream at the expense, it turns out, of skeptics and habitual rule-followers who thought twice about liar loans or thought it would be insane to expect home prices to continue to double every 18 months. The borrowers fueled the fire that is now burning through my money and the state’s diverting it from investments that might help me much more directly.

Yes, preventing the Great Depression II is a worthwhile cause, but one that should have been forestalled by all the regulatory checks and balances in place to manage the economy. Instead, we had a Fed and treasury Department also wrapped up in ideology during the bubble-building years: they refused to regulate the exploding lending industry and kept rates unreasonably low for too long to keep lenders awash in cheap money, which inevitably found its way into hyperinflated home values. And if the expected bailouts come through, moral hazard will reign supreme, as will the underlying fantasia about the importance of owning homes.

In this climate, the Democratic presidential candidates seem to be saying the wrong things and the Republican candidate the apparently sensible thing:

In the Presidential race, Republican Senator John McCain doesn’t want to bail out either side, favoring private workouts between borrowers and lenders. Here’s how he summed up his feelings on Mar.11: “It is not the government’s role to bail out investors...or lending institutions who didn’t do their job.” Democratic Senators Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton both tilt toward homeowners, but Clinton is more aggressive, calling for a voluntary 5-year freeze on subprime mortgage rates and a 90-day moratorium on foreclosures.

No one likes foreclosures—everybody involved loses. But no one likes deadbeats either. And no one likes ridiculously unaffordable prices for residential real estate. And homeowners who can’t afford the mortgages they signed up for—credulously or not—are not automatically victims. The real victims are the renters, who are seeing their rents increase with inflation while jobs become scarcer. That pool includes a lot of urbanites who you’d expect to lean Democratic, and they are probably more vulnerable than they would be ordinarily to some clever rhetoric from the Republicans. But then again, nothing about the current politicos in the G.O.P. leads me to believe that the party has the savvy or the inclination to make the pitch.

So the enemies of the ownership society have no place to turn.

Rob Horning

The Bear Sterns buyout is such a sweet heart deal for JP Morgan. Seriously? WTF? This bailout/buyout should have been structured so as to return something to the tax payers. This is the 2nd time in a week that the Fed has thrown IB a big bone and gotten nothing in return.

http://thelastgoodidea.blogspot.com/

Comment by Ross from Washington DC — March 19, 2008 @ 6:44 am

Well put.  I recently sold my house in SC to relocate back to Chicago (where I had lived prebubble) and thanks to a rational market and conservative financial acumen I sold my house for a reasonable return in a market that did not participate in the bubble.  As an executive with four young children and a stay at home wife, I knew for some time that I’d be renting in Chitown, hedging against a correction that is overdue.  Now, it looks like first I’m going to be taxed like crazy to cover everyone’s arse, and inevitably, the market correction will follow anyway.  The government and the lenders / investors need to take their medicine now rather than bide their time.  The tax rebate was a bad omen and it looks like it’s just going to get worse. . .

Comment by mark from South Carolina / Chicago — March 19, 2008 @ 6:59 am

So, Rob, I read through this and your thesis seems a little bit unfocused-- on the one side it sounds like you are a renter, essentially priced out of any reasonable market, and you advocate fiscal responsibility in our personal and the national economy.  At the same time you are expousing sympathy for these so-called “victims” out there who couldn’t be bothered to do a little research on what was probably the most important financial decision of their lives. 

I say, grow a set of testicles and come on over to the libertarian-ish bubble blogs and laugh with us while minorities, illegal immigrants, and women who made poor decisions get bent over the table and fiscally ass-raped.  Join us in our criticism of the government from continuing the lefty-leaning policies that got us in to this mess in to begin with.  Join us before there is no fiscally sound middle class left--of which you may be one.  One wonders who will pay the taxes then?

Comment by SF Mechanist — March 19, 2008 @ 11:27 am

Just another form of socialism. Take from the workers and give to the non-workers. In this case, take from the responsible and give to the irresponsible. Plain and simple. Isn’t that what the Democratic party is built on? Bad for the USA, many Republicans have become Socialists too.

Comment by Tim Jowers from Cary, NC — March 19, 2008 @ 12:39 pm

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No one loves foreclosures?  People who put off buying and have waited LOVE foreclosures.  The myth about shuttered neighborhoods only holds true when owners refuse to price their properties to market and realize the loss.  With Detroit as the possible exception, virtually any house has a price at which it will be snapped up instantly.  Subsidies to owners - in the various forms of relief, forgiveness, guarantees, and moratoria - only prolong the pain and prevent rational and rapid marking to market.

Comment by Derick Bulkley from San Francisco — March 19, 2008 @ 12:48 pm

Uh, guys, the Republicans chose the Fedhead and Treasury head.  They are the ones NOT overlooking the money policies, apparently, until there is a problem.  THEN they give solace to whom?  Their buddies at JPM with the sweetheart deal of the century.

I don’t see any help for the middle class here and plenty of free money for the idiots that got us into this mess with laissez-faire lending and no regulation or oversight.

Read some history guys.  This is the way it all fell out the last time we had a depression.

Comment by Zingo from California — March 19, 2008 @ 1:08 pm

I love hearing the banks and other free-market capitalists whine for government intervention.  And I love hearing the talking heads discussing how “Risk is returning to markets”.  LOL. 

This class of industry has been on easy street just long enough to hang themselves.  Let them swing.

Comment by popo from new york — March 19, 2008 @ 1:28 pm

It is simple. Live within your means. Cut up the cards and sell what you can to pay them off. Tighten your belts and hang on. learn thrift and screw the Joneses. They are as deeply in the red as you are.

Comment by Audrie from Las Vegas — March 19, 2008 @ 1:58 pm

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Both democrats and republicans can take some flak for the housing bubble and bust.  Democrats who fail to see the moral hazard of a bailout are irresponsible and uninformed, or complicit, IMO.  Republicans who allowed their corporate buddies to erode real regulation are also part of the problem.  It is mostly so called “business-friendliness” that has allowed corporations to essentially get away with fraud, and there was most certainly fraud behind a lot of the bubble.  Appraisal fraud, where lenders blackballed appraisers who didn’t meet the number.  Builders who set up mortgage co’s and got in on predatory/fraudulent lending practices. Illegal flipping schemes.  Toxic loans sold to buyers by deception and sometimes outright fraud.  Then those loans were resold as sound investments, to investors who didn’t do the best due diligence if they didn’t see the problems developing.  State attorney generals kept from going after predatory lenders, etc, by the federal govt.  Aggressive and professionally spun Homeownership programs and advertising campaigns blessed by our govt that told buyers real estate only goes up, that it is an “investment.” ETC. 

In other words, this is an industry created problem and the path was smoothed for it by our own govt.  It’s no secret that most “business friendly” politicians also happen to be republican.  REAL republicans would be against a bailout even if it means corporate cronies go down the toilet as a result of having to pay for their actions.  REAL republicans don’t make tax payers pay for corporate crooks.  What we have now is fake republicans who believe in capitalism only when their corporate pals don’t want a bailout.  The bailout is for the industry, it’s not really for consumers.

Those people supposedly in the know, and most able to avert these types of problems by engaging in ethical practices, (industry and govt.), chose to act unethically and chose to act in a way that would threaten the economy. 

While some of the buyers were defrauded, some were foolish or greedy.  One thing I’m sure of though is that the consumers didn’t have the knowledge or insider influence that the industry and govt did.  Therefore, if there is a culpable party, it’s the industry and anyone in govt who looked the other way at the patently obvious warning signs that were being seen years in advance of the bust.  For anyone in the industry or regulatory capacity to say they “didn’t see it coming” is either a sign of severe mental retardation or a bald faced lie.  Either way they aren’t fit to hold office or run a company.

Comment by Cindy from USA — March 19, 2008 @ 3:07 pm

“The housing bubble was a shared social problem that derived from people with laudable intentions but misguided methods.”

NO! That is NOT how we got here. The housing bubble was the culmination of 25 years of Fed interventions and bail-outs of insider banks whenever their bets went sour. Remember Citigroup getting in trouble with the Mexican peso or was it Argentina, or more likely both? The Savings and Loan crisis? The 1987 stock crash? The Asian Contagion? The Dot.com IPO bubble? Don’t read the rhetoric. Look who the actual winners and losers were. The farce is to enable insane bets to be made by investment banks as the markets are pumped up by printing money, then when things inevitably crash, bail out the insiders with tax payer money. Then, insiders are the only ones left standing and can buy up assets for pennies on the dollar. This consolidates power to the oligopoly. But an even greatest part is, through this system, purchasing power of the dollar continually erodes almost undetected, thus getting rid of that pesky middle class. Just remember Sir Alan Greenspan, knighted by the queen, instructing Congress that, “Lenders should not be overly sensitive to borrower qualifications”, right after the NASDAQ burst and shortly after the housing bubble got underway. Laudable intentions?! Hardly!

This has nothing to do with free market concepts or the Democratic or Republican parties as they exist today. They’re facilitating and benefitting from this system and have done everything they can to remove any regulations that could impede it. Look up their voting records!

As Jim Rogers says, “Abolish the Fed!”

Comment by suspicious from CA — March 19, 2008 @ 5:30 pm

Just another form of socialism. Take from the workers and give to the non-workers. In this case, take from the responsible and give to the irresponsible. Plain and simple.

Comment by Toronto Condos — April 30, 2008 @ 9:42 am

The government should have seen it coming, and reacted appropriately earlier. And as you said the government ‘has served primarily to prolong and exacerbate the problem.’

It’s an unfortunate situation, and the opposition to the bill (from certain GOP members)that would help those affected doesn’t help those living in trailer vans.

Comment by Business sale toronto from canada — May 15, 2008 @ 8:13 am

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