The current financial crisis, which had its roots from subprime mortgage crisis, began to increase dramatically in September of 2008. There have been significant economic disorders in United States alone. Major banks and financial organizations around the world are going bankrupt and writing down billion dollars. Housing markets are falling not just in United States but all around the world. This crisis is truly global and it is spreading like fire. Because of these economic crises, the US Congress came up with a $700 billion bailout plan to buy troubled assets from financial institutions who are struggling financially. Nevertheless, another bailout was proposed and it's the homeowner bailout. It is known that the foreclosure problem is getting worse and it is not planning to get better. There has been a number of housing proposals to help people with impaired mortgages and to prevent the increase in foreclosures. But it seems like with each proposal to save homeowners there are problems. The major problem is that more and more foreclosures are dumped on the market, which reduces the home prices considerably. The downfall in home prices means that more homeowners are overloaded with impaired mortgages, which means that their houses are worth a lot less than the original price that they bought the house for. Homes have lost already an average of 20 percent in value but, “most experts foresee another drop of at least 15 percent” (Zuckerman, 2008). Also as homes are abandoned by homeowners and are left empty because of foreclosure, it decreases the value of the whole neighborhood not just the one house. The decrease in house prices will obviously harm consumer assurance, consumer spending and will eventually affect not... ... middle of paper ... ...defaulting homeowners is the origin of this financial crisis. The goal of any bailout is to balance out the financial system and bring it to equilibrium. The financial system will not balance until house prices remain steady or step up, and house prices will fluctuate until the government finds a way to stop the increase of foreclosures. It is pretty obvious that the government is not doing their best to keep people in their homes, because they don't want to use the bailout for homeowners’ mortgage recovery. If the US government will not figure a plan out fast and the home prices will not stop declining, the economy is unlikely to recover. Even though the objective of the bailout bill was to protect the breakdown of the US financial system, the government needs to understand that the only way to stop this fire from spreading is to stabilize the housing market.
Although the crisis came to head in 2008, there were people who had realized that trouble was coming for years. The largest warning sign was the amount of credit in the market place. Many of the big companies and banks had very little capital, and the lack of capital was brought on by the housing bubble. Companies were lending too much money to people who could not pay them back. And even before people started to default on their mortgages, people could see that this was a problem. During a meeting with the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs in January 2007 the staff of the Federal Reserve admitted “that they were aware of [the] problem in the housing issue three years earlier” (Dodd). And they were not the only ones. As far back as 2001 there were people who saw the danger that sub-prime mortgages were and who were trying to have bills passed to stop the bad lending that was going on, but no one wanted to list...
The last quarter twelve percent (12%) of American homes are in default of their loan, or in foreclosure. Add that to the previous four quarters and that is eight point seven (8.7) million homes in crisis. (Further on known as HIC's) The United States “Bail Out” helped major mortgage corporations, and their chief executive officers (CEO's), but not the families that are in, or were in these HIC's across America.
The country is certainly in crisis, but the crisis is not being caused by mortgage foreclosure. Foreclosure is simply a mechanism for people to deal with a debt they can no longer afford. Rather than being a crisis, the potential onslaught of home foreclosures (which has been slowed somewhat by the Obama administration’s “Making Home Affordable” program) is actually market forces hard at work cleaning out the mess in the real estate market caused by too much cheap money loaned to people who were not sound credit risks to buy homes they could not afford. When home prices are completely out of line with wages and people who would normally have a hard time getting a friend to loan them $20 are able to take out interest-only loans to buy over-priced housing, something is very, very wrong. While it may be painful for many people, the real estate market collapsing, including thousands of inevitable foreclosures, is not a crisis, but rather a result of the real crisis – unserviceable debt.
In essence, the problem leading to the foreclosure crisis is the recent decrease in people’s ability to make their loan payments due to job loss and lower wages brought on by the economy’s weak state. Rather than throw billions of dollars at big banks in the hope that they find ways to help the homeowners’ loans, the government should attack the problem through the individual. Simply, the government aid being spent in the hopes of stimulating the economy should be funneled toward reducing the balance of home loans to make the monthly payments affordable for the owner. By funneling the government aid directly to the American home owner in need, the economy would greatly benefit as homeowners regain their footing with their budget because the economy and foreclosure are directly related. When one hurts, so does the other; when one prospers, the other does as we...
Our nation today has become spoiled with instant gratification. Loans and the borrowing system have given the idea that patience is no longer a virtue and that saving is no longer necessary. Material wealth is increased, but so is the idea of false wealth. People have become so bloated with it; therefore they take on more than they can afford. That is what has happened with our nation’s recent wave of foreclosures. Loans have led everyone to believe that they can own a home and it has omitted the practice of saving. That is where the beginning of the solution lies. Our nation’s people need to relearn the value of patience, therefore we need to learn how to start saving again because although loans may pave a way toward homeownership, it is not valued as much compared to someone who has saved for a home.
...just as welfare helped people during the great depression, this new plan could help people during this extreme recession. It is so important to keep people in their homes and not on the street and with help from our government and each individual taking responsibility for their actions, the amount of people facing foreclosure can decrease. Every American wants to know that they have a place to go home to and to call their own. For many people placing their homes up for foreclosure was something they never thought would happen and it is easy to say what one would have done to prevent this. As American we must stop blaming and looking at what has happened to the housing market and start planning on ways to fix this situation. Our country should take the resources we have now in the present, and create a plane to insure that every person is taken care of in the future.
dropped 10.9% causing the home market to suffer. Individuals who have subprime mortgagees to finance these less expensive homes are often times forced into foreclosure due to substantial rate changes. In affect, the economy faces acontinuing negative cycle of subprime delinquencies that result in tighter credit and lower home prices.17 A worsening of the American housing market will negatively affect the consumers confidence while at the same time worsening the American economy.18
The Federal Reserve failed again to adequately prevent another recession from happening, in 2008 2.6 million people lost their jobs and millions of American homes were foreclosed. In 2009 when the financial crisis was declared over, there were more than 4 million people unemployed, GDP growth has been slower than ever, and the housing market has remained sluggish. In 1999, The Federal National Mortgage Association (Freddie Mae) began to make subprime mortgage loans easier for people who did not have the savings to buy new homes. In 2004 consumer debt reached $2 Trillion for the first time, high levels of consumer debt is not beneficial for an economy because it can lead to bankruptcy. Business Insider’s John Carney wrote, “Americans were told that in order to prevent another Great Depression, the government had no choice but to implement the same policies that failed to lift the country out of the actual Great Depression”. By 2007 it became clear that the housing market was going down and by 2008 the government bailed out a list of banks and companies that should have went bankrupt. Once again, the Federal Reserve Bank failed to accurately prevent another financial crisis and only served to benefit a few bankers, politicians and their friends at the expense of the rest of
The foreclosure crisis has been devastating. Families no longer able to afford mortgage payments are forced into bankruptcy, while banks find themselves with properties valued at less than the loan principal. Solutions proposed thus far have primarily focused on loan re-modification measures that only slightly relieve the financial burden for homeowners and frustrate lenders who are forced into less attractive loan terms. However, one solution not being discussed in congress may resolve the housing market slump while benefiting families and investors alike.
Who hasn’t wanted the “American Dream” of the perfect family with a dog and of course a home? For decades property ownership has been an essential status of importance. Aristotle argued in Politics, “the greater the number of owners, the less the respect for common property. People are much more careful of their personal possessions than of those owned communally; they exercise care over common property only in so far as they are personally affected.” I believe around ten years ago before I was married I read about the housing market and how important it was for people to buy houses now. The market was hot then. The opportunity and the dream of homeownership was a must until the drop between 2010 and 2014. People rushed out before then
Foreclosure in America has been a rising and prominent problem recently, and has destroyed many Americans hopes and dreams. Over 2.3 million homes were foreclosed in 2008, and an estimated four million homes will be foreclosed by the end of this year. Despite the efforts of many banks and lending companies, over half of homes will foreclose that have received their help. I believe that we have only started in the right direction in solving the foreclosure crisis. Giving money and lowering mortgage rates will help, but I believe we should find out why Americans are in this situation in the first place. We are being too stereotypical when we think the only reason someone is foreclosing is because of irresponsible payments or buying a home out of a person’s capabilities to pay for it. If we understand their situation, we will be better enabled to help and solve their crisis.
It’s hard when a home becomes a house: left with walls, stripped of memories. It’s disheartening when a family becomes a number: left with foreclosure, stripped of dignity. In 2007, over-extended borrowers began to default on their sub-prime mortgages; mortgages that increased as more and more families chased the American dream during the housing boom. The interest rates were “teasingly” low, but more detrimentally, they were variable. When mortgage rates were readjusted, homeowners found that they could no longer pay the upped monthly payments. Such sucked them in to the dizzying downward spin of heightened debt and negative equity. Such sucked them into the foreclosure crisis.
To really be able to fix the housing market, we have to look at how it got so bad to begin with. Banks were giving loans out to people who couldn’t afford to repay them. That was, what I see, as the most detrimental situation regarding the housing market. Are the banks only to blame? Absolutely not. Those people who took those loans with little thought of repercussions also caused this mess. We shouldn’t be borrowing money so loosely and the banks should not have made it so easy.
In these days, homeowners certainly have a lot of expenses to think about, especially new homeowners. It is best to prioritize what expense should be put up first in the list. The maintenance of the house, maintenance of the garden, Homeowners Association dues and various other expenses are just some of the monthly expenditure a homeowner must consider. There is yet another thing threatening to eat up your hard-earned income. Home intruders, robbers, thieves or burglars or whatever you want to call them.
...nd people just trying to sell their homes were harmed by this because there were items available for a lower price. Putting regulations on the percentage a loan can be, and the ability to give out risky loans would assist in averting this crisis in the future.