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Texas
Straight Talk
www.house.gov/paul
Big
Government Responsible For Housing Bubble
By
Rep. Ron Paul
May
13, 2008
The House passed
two bills attempting to rehabilitate the housing and mortgage market
this week. There doesn't seem to be any shortage
of criticism and blame for the bad decisions, and rightly so.
Lenders and banks do share much of the blame for the
overheated market. Lending standards were
relaxed, or even abandoned altogether, creating an exaggerated pool
of homebuyers that led to ballooning home prices that many,
especially real estate investors, expected to continue forever.
Now that the bubble has burst, the losses are staggering.
However, many in
Washington
fail to realize it was government intervention that brought on the
current economic malaise in the first place. The
Federal Reserve’s artificially low interest rates created the
loose, easy credit that ignited a voracious appetite in the banks
for borrowers. People made these lending and
buying decisions based on market conditions that were wildly
manipulated by government. But part of sound
financial management should be recognizing untenable or falsified
economic conditions and adjusting risk accordingly. Many
banks failed to do that and are now looking to taxpayers to pick up
the pieces. This is wrong-headed and unfair, but
Congress is attempting to do it anyway.
These housing bills
address the crisis in exactly the wrong way, by seeking to hide the
problem with more disastrous government bail-outs and interventions.
One measure, HR 5830 the Federal Housing Administration (FHA)
Housing Stabilization and Homeowner Retention Act would allow the
FHA to guarantee as much as $300 billion worth of refinanced home
loans for those facing threat of foreclosure. HR
5818 the Neighborhood Stabilization Act, would provide $15 billion
in loans and grants to localities to purchase and renovate
foreclosed homes with the object of then selling or renting out
those homes. Thankfully, President Bush has vowed
to veto both of these bills. It is neither
morally right nor fiscally wise to socialize private losses in this
way.
The solution is for
government to stop micromanaging the economy and let the market
adjust, as painful as that will be for some. We
should not force taxpayers, including renters and more frugal
homeowners, to switch places with the speculators and take on those
same risks that bankrupted them. It is a terrible idea to
spread the financial crisis any wider or deeper than it already is,
and to prolong the agony years into the future. Socializing
the losses now will only create more unintended consequences that
will give new excuses for further government interventions in the
future. This is how government grows - by claiming to correct the
mistakes it earlier created, all the while constantly shaking down
the taxpayer. The market needs a chance to
correct itself, and Congress needs to avoid making the situation
worse by pretending to ride to the rescue.
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