Bush
Profiteering from Housing Defaults
by
James Bovard
by James Bovard
   
President Bush is determined to end the
prejudice against people who want to buy a home but don’t have
any money. Since he became president the U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development has spent more than $120 billion.
HUD public-housing projects continue to devastate poor
neighborhoods. HUD largesse to local governments continues to
finance the confiscation and demolition of private homes, and
HUD programs continue to spur fraud and corruption around the
nation.
Bush has done almost nothing to reduce HUD’s
damage to America. Instead, he is devoting himself to expanding
home giveaways. He proclaimed on June 16, 2003,
Homeownership is more than just a symbol of the
American dream; it is an important part of our way of life.
Core American values of individuality, thrift, responsibility,
and self-reliance are embodied in homeownership.
In Bush’s eyes, self-reliance is so
wonderful that the government should subsidize it.
Bush could be exposing taxpayers to tens of
billions of dollars of losses, luring thousands of low- and
moderate-income people to the heartbreak of losing their first
house, and risking wrecking entire neighborhoods. Bush’s
housing initiatives – especially his “American Dream Down
Payment Act” to give free down payments to selected home
buyers – were key planks in his reelection campaign. He is
also pushing Congress to enact a law to permit the feds to give
zero-down-payment mortgages.
The Bush “Dream Act” and the
zero-down-payment plan are modeled after “down-payment
assistance programs” that have proliferated in recent years.
These programs, often engineered by nonprofit groups, routinely
involve a home builder giving a “gift” to the nonprofit,
which provides a home buyer with money for the down payment. The
price of the house is sometimes increased by the same amount as
the builder’s “gift.” Almost all the mortgages created
with down-payment assistance end up being underwritten or
guaranteed by either the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) or
Ginnie Mae (the Government National Mortgage Association).
Free down payments carry catastrophic risks.
The default rate on mortgages from the largest
down-payment-assistance organization, Nehemiah Corp., is 25
times higher than the nationwide mortgage-delinquency rate,
according to the HUD inspector general. The default rate on
Nehemiah mortgages quadrupled between 1999 and 2002, reaching
almost 20 percent. The I.G. warned that permitting the Federal
Housing Administration to insure mortgages made with gifts from
down-payment organizations is “endangering the FHA insurance
pool.” HUD currently has no idea how many of the loans that
the FHA is underwriting are closed with down-payment gifts.
Bush began pushing his American Dream Down
Payment plan in 2002. The administration’s rhetoric echoed the
1968 Housing Act, which nullified state and local restrictions
on where blacks and other groups could live. A June 17, 2002,
White House Fact Sheet declared that Bush’s agenda
will help tear down the barriers to
homeownership that stand in the way of our nation’s
African-American, Hispanic, and other minority families by
providing down-payment assistance. The single biggest barrier
to home-ownership is accumulating funds for a down payment.
The Bush administration sounded as if
requiring down payments is the new version of Jim Crow laws.
Enacting the “American Dream”
The Bush administration finally got its
“Dream Act” pushed through Congress in the fall of 2003. The
House leadership chose freshman congresswoman Katherine Harris
(the Republican hero of the Florida 2000 recount) for the honor
of sponsoring the bill. Harris declared,
As our nation continues to confront daunting
threats both at home and abroad, we cannot neglect the most
basic security of all, and that is a safe, clean, adequate
place to live.
One congressional staffer raised the question
of whether “HUD will soon send out maids to ensure our right
to a clean house.”
When Bush signed the act on December 16, 2003,
he declared,
One of the biggest hurdles to homeownership is
getting money ... so today I’m honored to be here to sign a
law that will help many low-income buyers to overcome that
hurdle, and to achieve an important part of the American
Dream.
He plaintively added,
The rate of homeownership amongst minorities is
below 50 percent. And that’s not right, and this country
needs to do something about it.
Bush did not specify the precise percentage of
blacks and Hispanics that would be “right.” The new law
authorized federal handouts of $5,000 each for 40,000 home
buyers whose incomes are less than 80 percent of a local
area’s median.
The Bush administration and Republicans
portray down-payment giveaways as if they were primarily
targeted to minorities:
- After Bush visited a black neighborhood in
Atlanta in 2002 to hype his housing-aid proposal, his first
HUD secretary, Mel Martinez, explained, “We sell it that
way, as a program for minorities, because we want minority
buyers for these homes, but it’s available to anyone”
who qualifies under income guidelines.
- When the House passed the American Dream
Down Payment Act on October 1, 2003, House Speaker Dennis
Hastert hailed the bill: “We will help lift up our
African-American and Hispanic communities.”
- HUD secretary Alfonso Jackson declared in
February 2004 that the Bush administration efforts “will
help more Americans, particularly minorities, achieve
that dream” of homeownership.
- If the down-payment program actually
specifically targeted minorities, it would violate numerous
federal laws and the U.S. Constitution.
The “right” of homeownership
Bush talks as if people should be able to buy
a house the same way they buy a couch at some dubious
no-money-down furniture store. In a January 23, 2004, speech to
the U.S. Conference of Mayors, he declared,
I’m asking Congress for $200 million to help
people with their down payment.... Many citizens have the
desire to own a home, but they don’t have the dough
to make the down payment. And therefore, they balk at making
the decision.
But to portray this as a “balk” makes as
little sense as criticizing the average wage earner for not
purchasing a yacht.
Once Bush proclaims a national goal, he
entitles himself to claim credit for the efforts of all
Americans. At an October 15, 2003, talk at Ruiz Foods (the
nation’s largest producer of frozen Mexican food) in Dinuba,
California, Bush reminded listeners of his devotion to boosting
homeownership: “And so I let out a goal. I said over the next
decade, we want there to be 5.5 million new minority
homeowners.” Then Bush informed his listeners of what he’d
helped to achieve: “Last year, we did a pretty good
job. There’s now 809,000 new minority homeowners in
America.”
Bush took credit for every black and Hispanic
person who bought a home during his administration – even
though the vast majority received no help from him. Bush exalts
in the recent rise in the number of Americans who own homes as
one of his greatest accomplishments:
It turns out that one of the fantastic
statistics and one of the realities of our society today is
more people own homes than ever before.
The percentage of Americans who own homes rose
from 66.2 percent in 2001 to 68.6 percent in late 2003. But the
foreclosure rate is rising much faster than the homeownership
rate. The foreclosure rate for home mortgages has tripled since
the early 1980s. The rate has especially “gone up a lot ... in
struggling neighborhoods in big cities,” according to Federal
Reserve Board governor Edward Gramlich.
Zero-down-payment loans
A month after signing the “Dream Act,”
Bush urged Congress to permit the FHA to begin making
zero-down-payment loans to low-income Americans. The
administration forecast that such mortgages could be given to
150,000 home buyers in the first year. Secretary Jackson
declared,
Offering FHA mortgages with no down payment
will unlock the door to homeownership for hundreds of
thousands of American families, particularly minorities.
Federal Housing Commissioner John Weicher said
in January 2004 that “the White House doesn’t think those
who can afford the monthly payment but have been unable to save
for a down payment should be deprived from owning a
home,” National Mortgage News reported. While
zero-down-payment mortgages have long been considered profoundly
unsafe (especially for borrowers with dubious credit history),
Weicher confidently asserted, “We do not anticipate any costs
to taxpayers.”
The Bush administration aims to make more
dubious mortgages, even though the percentage of FHA
single-family home loans that have defaulted rose 54 percent
between 1999 and 2002, reaching 4.25 percent. Roughly 12 percent
of all FHA mortgages are past due.
Avoiding making unsound mortgages seems to be
the last item on HUD’s list of priorities. Weicher declared in
January 2004, “We have been addressing our default rate, and
we are now able to help half the families who go into default
avoid foreclosure.” This merely suppresses the evidence of a
failed policy and sticks taxpayers with a larger bill once the
roof finally falls in.
A neighborhood wrecking ball
The FHA continues wreaking devastation in some
neighborhoods and cities across the country. A 2002 study by the
National Training and Information Center, a Chicago nonprofit
organization, found that between 1996 and 2000 21 percent of FHA
loans in low-income areas in Baltimore defaulted and 25 percent
of FHA loans in low-income areas in Queens, New York, defaulted.
Eight of the 22 cities studied had default rates above 12
percent. The FHA paid out more than $5 billion in settlements on
defaulted mortgages in 2001. More than 45,000 FHA homes were
abandoned and vacant.
Homeownership carries far more financial rude
surprises (such as the cost of major repairs) than does renting.
If people get into a house they cannot financially handle and go
bankrupt, they are much worse off than if they had never
received down-payment assistance. Giving people a handout that
leads them to financial ruin – as the Small Business
Administration perennially does for people unfit to be small
business owners – is wrecking-ball benevolence. The virtues of
homeownership do not arise from living in a single-family
dwelling and holding a piece of paper from a bank. Rep. Ron Paul
(R–Tex.) commented,
In the original version of the American dream,
individuals earned the money to purchase a house through their
own efforts, oftentimes sacrificing other goods to save for
their first down payment.... That old American dream has been
replaced by a new dream of having the federal government force
your fellow citizens to hand you the money for a down payment.
Bush’s freebie hype could make the millions
of low- and moderate-income Americans who are saving and
scrimping for a down payment feel like fools. Bush talks as if
the federal government is obliged to relieve all Americans from
the nuisance of ever having to accumulate any personal savings.
Down-payment handouts and zero-down-payments
are a great political strategy for Bush. He gets the applause
and the political credit now, and the defaults from the program
may not surge until much later. He transfers the risk of
homeownership from buyers to taxpayers and then pretends he has
multiplied virtue in America. He preens as a great benefactor at
the same time he undermines those virtues that he is claiming to
multiply.
In the early 1930s, shanty-towns of destitute
unemployed people were known as Hoovervilles. In the coming
years, if neighborhood after neighborhood is wrecked by waves of
defaults and foreclosures caused by the reckless new mortgage
policies, the areas should be known as “Bush blights.”
June
11, 2005
James
Bovard [send him mail] is
the author of The
Bush Betrayal and Terrorism
& Tyranny: Trampling Freedom, Justice, and Peace to Rid the
World of Evil serves as a policy advisor for The
Future of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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