What we have is a buyer's market as home prices fall after being over-inflated by a bubble created by people who decided that micro-managing banks when they had no real expertise was a good idea.We now have a market where a home lender has as much credability as a used car sellsman.
That does not bode well for the market.
I agree with that. Too bad we keep voting for populists who tell us what they will give to us and take pride in crowing about the "more home owners" crap while, at the very least, cheering on and promoting what will become a problem.the assinging of blame to "stupid people" is mental masturbation at this point. This is going to affect all of us at some level, and could affect the US and world economy.
It's a problem that should have been addressed years ago. Regardless of who you want to blame.
Since you have such a "good" grasp on this situation desh.... please explain to us....
1) Why did the 1999 bill (signed by Clinton) receive BI PARTISAN support in overwhelming numbers?
2) If the Dems knew this was such a problem... WHY did they not introduce a bill at the start of 2007 to reverse the 1999 bill? It would not have changed the loans outstanding, but it would correct the problem for the future.
3) WHY did the Dems not make this the second major issue behind Iraq during the election years of 2002, 2004 or 2006?
4) Why did they not go to state legislatures that the Dems controlled and have them enact STATE regulations to curb this practice?
Republican Bill Aims to Mute State Laws on Subprime Loans
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1045173831835038663.html?mod=article-outset-box
"About 35 states already have some laws against predatory lending. The state efforts to regulate the subprime market ``have been met with resistance or indifference from federal regulators and even Congress,'' Smith said at a March hearing of the Senate Banking Committee.
Few Significant Actions
There were ``few, if any, significant consumer-protection enforcement actions'' by the federal government, he said.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20670001&refer=politics&sid=a2OzDA13SxJM
How the Feds Pre-Empted State Law
With millions of families facing these exploitive lending practices, the question is why the government didn't act to stop it? The answer is that the states did act-- but the federal government, backed by campaign contributions from predatory lenders, shut them down and helped create this mortgage crisis.
http://www.progressivestates.org/co...nding-bubble-and-how-the-feds-made-it-worse#3
You mean idiotic crap like saying they would place a moratorium on foreclosures? Whoever said that is an economic idiot.I agree with that. Too bad we keep voting for populists who tell us what they will give to us and take pride in crowing about the "more home owners" crap while, at the very least, cheering on and promoting what will become a problem.
Ive have been looking for this information for days and finnally found it.
Here is and example of bills introduced by democrats in the congress during the 109th congress tring to deal with the growing problem. The Republicans killed all the bills.
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/...H.CON.RES.107:
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquer...:@@@D&summ2=m&
You are correct that this would not solve the problem in and of itself. Furthermore, Desh hasn't linked up that predatory lending is not the same as sub-prime lending, so this isn't even the same issue.Yes, I read it...I still don't see how it takes any steps to solve the problem...all it does is recognise a problem.