Subprime Suspects
"The right blames the credit crisis on poor
minority homeowners. This is not merely offensive, but entirely
wrong."
VP Candidate Palin may not
think it is important to understand what caused the current credit crisis, but
you can't fix a problem, long term, without understanding the cause. Here is a
rebut of the idea that we are in the crisis because banks did business with the
working poor.
By
Daniel
Gross |
Newsweek
Web
Exclusive |
October 7,
2008We've now entered a new stage
of the financial crisis: the ritual assigning of blame. It began in earnest with
Monday's congressional roasting of Lehman Brothers CEO Richard Fuld, and
continued on Tuesday with Capitol Hill solons delving into the failure of AIG.
On the Republican side of Congress, in the right-wing financial media (which is
to say the financial media), and in certain parts of the op-ed-o-sphere, there's
a consensus emerging that the whole mess should be laid at the feet of Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac, the failed mortgage giants, and the Community Reinvestment
Act, a law passed during the Carter administration. The CRA, which was amended
in the 1990s and this decade, requires banks—which had a long,
distinguished history of not making loans to minorities—to make more
efforts to do so.The thesis is laid
out almost daily on The Wall Street Journal editorial page and in the National
Review.Washington Post columnist Charles Krauthammer provides an excellent
example, writingthat "much of this crisis was brought upon us by the good
intentions of good people." He continues: "For decades, starting with Jimmy
Carter's Community Reinvestment Act of 1977, there has been bipartisan agreement
to use government power to expand homeownership to people who had been shut out
for economic reasons or, sometimes, because of racial and ethnic discrimination.
What could be a more worthy cause? But it led to tremendous pressure on Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac—which in turn pressured banks and other
lenders—to extend mortgages to people who were borrowing over their heads.
That's called subprime lending. It lies at the root of our current calamity."
The subtext: if only Congress didn't force banks to lend money to poor
minorities, the Dow would be well on its way to 36,000. Or, as Fox Business
Channel's Neil Cavuto put it: "I don't remember a clarion call that said: Fannie
and Freddie are a disaster. Loaning to minorities and risky folks is a
disaster."Let me get this straight.
Investment banks and insurance companies run by centimillionaires blow up, and
it's the fault of Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, and poor
minorities?click
here to read more
Filed Wed - October 8, 2008, 01:34 PM in
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