NDN Applauds Senator Clinton's Proposal to Keep People in Their Homes
In an op-ed published in today's Wall Street Journal, U.S. Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY) makes a forceful and compelling argument that any proposal to bail out Wall Street financial institutions must include provisions to help the millions of Americans who have lost or in are danger of losing their homes as a result of mortgage defaults and foreclosures.
Senator Clinton writes:
There is a broad consensus that Congress must act to stave off deeper turmoil on Wall Street. Irrespective of the final agreement yet to be reached, there are several principles that must be part of a broader reform effort that begins this week and continues in the coming months.
This is not just a financial crisis; it's an economic crisis. Therefore, the solutions we pursue cannot simply stabilize the markets. We must also deal with the interconnected economic challenges that set the stage for this crisis -- and reverse the failed policies that allowed a potential crisis to become a real one.
First, we must address the skyrocketing rates of mortgage defaults and foreclosures that have buffeted the economy and ignited the credit crisis. Two million homeowners carry mortgages worth more than their homes. They hold $3 trillion in mortgage debt. Nearly three million adjustable-rate mortgages are scheduled for a rate increase in the next two years. Another wave of foreclosures looms.
I've proposed a new Home Owners' Loan Corporation (HOLC), to launch a national effort to help homeowners refinance their mortgages. The original HOLC, launched in 1933, bought mortgages from failed banks and modified the terms so families could make affordable payments while keeping their homes. The original HOLC returned a profit to the Treasury and saved one million homes. We can save roughly three times that many today. We should also put in place a temporary moratorium on foreclosures and freeze rate hikes in adjustable-rate mortgages. We've got to stem the tide of failing mortgages and give the markets time to recover.
The time for ideological, partisan arguments against these actions is over. For years, the calls to provide borrowers an affordable opportunity to avoid foreclosure as a means of preventing wider turmoil were dismissed as government intrusion into the private marketplace. My proposals over the past two years were derided as too much, too soon. Now we are forced to reckon with too little, too late.
As a result, the home-mortgage crisis slowly erode d the value of debt instruments upon which Wall Street firms were depending. That is how this house of borrowed cards began to fall. If we do not take action to address the crisis facing borrowers, we'll never solve the crisis facing lenders. These problems go hand in hand. And if we are going to take on the mortgage debt of storied Wall Street giants, we ought to extend the same help to struggling, middle-class families.
Senator Clinton's op-ed, entitled, "Let's Keep People In Their Homes," echoes NDN's statements of last week and this week. On Tuesday of this week, NDN Globalization Initiative Chairman Dr. Robert Shapiro and NDN President Simon Rosenberg released an op-ed, "Keep People in Their Homes," which can be read here.
NDN applauds Senator Clinton's leadership on this critical issue.
- Melissa Merz's blog
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Comments
kevin nash
According to my point of view if we do not take action to address the crisis facing borrowers, we'll never solve the crisis facing lenders.
kind regards,
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