How to Shake Off the Mortgage Mess
July 30 2008 - Where are the hosannas for Congress’s handiwork on housing? Nobody expected it to solve anything, but it’s worth understanding why.
By CNBC’s count, the federal government has already made roughly $1.4 trillion available to refinance mortgage debt since the housing meltdown began. That makes this week’s bill, which adds another $300 billion to the pot, seem a mite anticlimactic. The key word is refinance. Even if this money helps prevent foreclosures, it’s aimed at houses that people want and that would likely resell even if foreclosed. Hardly touched is the real problem of tens of thousands of houses financed during the subprime boom that are unoccupied, unwanted, falling apart, built on spec, mortgaged on spec and abandoned on spec.
Washington has practically monopolized the business of financing and refinancing home sales for willing buyers and sellers, but it does nothing about the homes going rancid on the shelf, souring the value of the nation’s entire housing stock and mortgage debt.
How to Shake Off the Mortgage Mess
by HOLMAN W. JENKINS, JR. | Wall Street Journal