It does not seem to matter how many times you explain what really caused the housing crash, folks seem to want to blame it on those who were not responsible for getting us in this mess.  If you want the culprits, you could start by looking at Barnie Frank (and he had help in congress from other democrats).  Sadly, Obama is doing the same thing all over again............kind of the insanity thing where you keep doing the same thing over and over expecting a different result each time.  Or even worse, Mr. Obama just plain doesn't care about the outcome.

 

The protesters have been sold a bill of goods. Reckless government policies, not private greed, brought about the housing bubble and resulting financial crisis.

There is no mystery where the Occupy Wall Street movement came from: It is an offspring of the same false narrative about the causes of the financial crisis that exculpated the government and brought us the Dodd-Frank Act. According to this story, the financial crisis and ensuing deep recession was caused by a reckless private sector driven by greed and insufficiently regulated. It is no wonder that people who hear this tale repeated endlessly in the media turn on Wall Street to express their frustration with the current conditions in the economy.

Their anger should be directed at those who developed and supported the federal government's housing policies that were responsible for the financial crisis.

Beginning in 1992, the government required Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to direct a substantial portion of their mortgage financing to borrowers who were at or below the median income in their communities. The original legislative quota was 30%. But the Department of Housing and Urban Development was given authority to adjust it, and through the Bill Clinton and George W. Bush administrations HUD raised the quota to 50% by 2000 and 55% by 2007.

It is certainly possible to find prime borrowers among people with incomes below the median. But when more than half of the mortgages Fannie and Freddie were required to buy were required to have that characteristic, these two government-sponsored enterprises had to significantly reduce their underwriting standards.


Fannie and Freddie were not the only government-backed or government-controlled organizations that were enlisted in this process. The Federal Housing Administration was competing with Fannie and Freddie for the same mortgages. And thanks to rules adopted in 1995 under the Community Reinvestment Act, regulated banks as well as savings and loan associations had to make a certain number of loans to borrowers who were at or below 80% of the median income in the areas they served.

Research by Edward Pinto, a former chief credit officer of Fannie Mae (now a colleague of mine at the American Enterprise Institute) has shown that 27 million loans—half of all mortgages in the U.S.—were subprime or otherwise weak by 2008. That is, the loans

were made to borrowers with blemished credit, or were loans with no or low down payments, no documentation, or required only interest payments.

Of these, over 70% were held or guaranteed by Fannie and Freddie or some other government agency or government-regulated institution. Thus it is clear where the demand for these deficient mortgages came from.

The huge government investment in subprime mortgages achieved its purpose. Home ownership in the U.S. increased to 69% from 65% (where it had been for 30 years). But it also led to the biggest housing bubble in American history. This bubble, which lasted from 1997 to 2007, also created a huge private market for mortgage-backed securities (MBS) based on pools of subprime loans.

As housing bubbles grow, rising prices suppress delinquencies and defaults. People who could not meet their mortgage obligations could refinance or sell, because their houses were now worth more.

Accordingly, by the mid-2000s, investors had begun to notice that securities based on subprime mortgages were producing the high yields, but not showing the large number of defaults, that are usually associated with subprime loans. This triggered strong investor demand for these securities, causing the growth of the first significant private market for MBS based on subprime and other risky mortgages.

By 2008, Mr. Pinto has shown, this market consisted of about 7.8 million subprime loans, somewhat less than one-third of the 27 million that were then outstanding. The private financial sector must certainly share some blame for the financial crisis, but it cannot fairly be accused of causing that crisis when only a small minority of subprime and other risky mortgages outstanding in 2008 were the result of that private activity.

When the bubble deflated in 2007, an unprecedented number of weak mortgages went into default, driving down housing prices throughout the U.S. and throwing Fannie and Freddie into insolvency. Seeing these sudden losses, investors fled from the market for privately issued MBS, and mark-to-market accounting required banks and others to write down the value of their mortgage-backed assets to the distress levels in a market that now had few buyers. This raised questions about the solvency and liquidity of the largest financial institutions and began a period of great investor anxiety.

The government's rescue of Bear Stearns in March 2008 temporarily calmed the market. But it created significant moral hazard: Market participants were led to believe that the government would rescue all large financial institutions. When Lehman Brothers was allowed to fail in September, investors panicked. They withdrew their funds from the institutions that held large amounts of privately issued MBS, causing banks and others—such as investment banks, finance companies and insurers—to hoard cash against the risk of further withdrawals. Their refusal to lend to one another in these conditions froze credit markets, bringing on what we now call the financial crisis.

The narrative that came out of these events—largely propagated by government officials and accepted by a credulous media—was that the private sector's greed and risk-taking caused the financial crisis and the government's policies were not responsible. This narrative stimulated the punitive Dodd-Frank Act—fittingly named after Congress's two key supporters of the government's destructive housing policies. It also gave us the occupiers of Wall Street.

Mr. Wallison is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. He was a member Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission and dissented from the majority's report.

 article here:  http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203633104576623083437...

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Comment by JL Gawlik on October 12, 2011 at 12:39pm

Patricia, If anyone heard the NEA attorney Bob Chanin speech about what they really care about, i do not see how any American citizen can support that group, their agenda and their goals, it has nothing to do with the education of children or our youth, it is all about MONEY & POWER, period:

http://www.cato-at-liberty.org/retiring-general-counsels-shocking-a...

Here is another interesting incident at the DC protest: 

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/dcs-occupy-protest-attractin...

It is becoming very clear what is going on in these protests, a very sad situation and these people are being used by far left loons and the Progressive Democrats and their comrades.

Comment by Patricia M. McBride on October 12, 2011 at 11:46am

There are quite a bunch of them JL.  And even the National Education Association...........but since the head of the teachers union is an avowed communist, I guess I am not surprised.  How the people of this country stand to have a full blown communist in charge of the teachers union is beyond me!

Comment by JL Gawlik on October 12, 2011 at 10:58am
Patricia, as usual great blog and information. I had copied a PDF of WE ARE ONE NATION protesters back in Sept 2010, they marched on DC in 2010 right before the elections, i could not figure out how to post a PDF so i went to the way back machine and found a screenshot of it on a url:

 

http://web.archive.org/web/20100924062100/http://www.onenationworki...

 

These were the groups and organizations participating in that March and are probably many of the same in this protest for obvious reasons, they all want to destroy our Constitutional Republic.

 

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