I was reading the opinion piece
Chris excoriated earlier, and came upon this paragraph that I agree with:
Nor is it fair, as The Great Santelli has declared on CNBC, that homeowners who have paid their bills and have been careful not to take on too much credit are now being asked to provide relief to homeowners who have not. Unfortunately, the price of righteous indignation is a wave of foreclosures, a further decline in home values and billions of dollars of additional loan losses at banks that are already on government life support. Given the financial and economic hits they have already taken, that's a price that most "innocent" homeowners and taxpayers would probably prefer not to pay.
I agree totally. It's unfair for the rest of us, who either scrimped and saved and paid our mortgages on time, or who got mortgages we could afford, or who forwent buying a new home altogether, to have to pay for those who gambled and lost. But... just like with the banking crisis, we're not helping them out of the goodness of our heart - we're helping them to help ourselves. It's an unfortunate fact that if massive numbers of Americans lose their homes, it only hurts the economy that much more.
But. A friend raised an interesting point a few weeks ago. These people, like the woman in the ABC story I wrote about several months ago, who own million dollar homes and are getting their mortgage rates dropped from 7% to 4-point-something. What happens in a few years when they get back on their feet, when the economy is better, when they get a high-paying job, or even just marry someone with money? Will we, the taxpayers, still be subsidizing what is now clearly a windfall for someone who no longer needs the help? (Not to mention, if the rate cut never goes away, there's no incentive to go out and get a better job, sell your million dollar home for a smaller, less expensive one, when the economy picks back up.) I don't claim to be a mortgage expert, but I'd like to see all of these bailouts, at least in the housing realm, do three things.
First, phase them out when the bail-out-ee no longer needs them, or at least in a certain number of years, after the person bailed out has been given enough time to improve their lot, or sell their place.
Second, provide some benefit, some "reward" as it were, to those who didn't need a bailout. Perhaps all those who did the right thing get a one-time tax rebate once the economy is back on its feet. Or they get a special deal on interest rates on their next home. I don't know what. But there ought to be some incentive in the market for doing the right thing, and not just a never-ending incentive to do the wrong thing.
And third, why are we giving businesses money they need to pay back, but giving homeowners cash they never have to pay back? If some people are getting bailed out, for the good of us all, then there should be an expectation that those people kick back in to the system, somehow, eventually. Meaning, they eventually pay a portion of the money back. Or they do community service. Something. But there ought to be incentives for doing the right thing, and doing the wrong thing. Or else I fear we're gonna be here again some day. Not to mention, it's just fair.
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