Friday, August 31, 2007

FEDERAL HOUSING ADMINISTRATION TO PROVIDE SAFETY NET

From USA Today:

President Bush announced a series of "limited" steps Friday designed to help homeowners struggling to pay their mortgages, expanding the role of the Federal Housing Administration and proposing a temporary change in tax law to prevent people from being penalized when they refinance risky "subprime" adjustable-rate mortgages.

Under Bush's proposal, an estimated 80,000 homeowners with bruised credit and subprime ARMs they can no longer afford will be able to refinance loans, which the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) would insure.

The move marks a historic expansion of the role of the FHA, a Depression-era agency that has traditionally served low- and moderate-income families and first-time buyers, but not delinquent borrowers. Nearly 16% of subprime borrowers are behind on their ARMs, and an estimated 2 million subprime ARMs totaling about $600 billion will reset to higher rates through the end of next year.

To qualify for the new benefit, homeowners would have to prove they paid their loan on time before it reset to a higher rate and must have at least 3% equity in the home.

Under current rules, the maximum loan the FHA can guarantee is $202,000 in most states and up to $362,000 in high-cost states such as California and New York.

Bush also called on Congress to pass his proposal to reform the FHA, in part by raising those loan limits to $262,000 in most states and $417,000 in pricier areas.

2 comments:

Editor said...

Bailing out people who get in over their head is seemingly not the role of government in a free-market economy, but perhaps to stave off potentially severe economic consequences for everyone, this program might be necessary.

I do understand and sympathize with those who bought modest houses and through job loss or other circumstances have difficulty paying for their home, but there are far too many out there who bought extravagantly priced houses that were out of their league and didn't have a plan to pay for them if their adjustable rate mortgage payment increased. For these people, I have no pity and would offer no programs or handouts. Economic lessons are sometimes harsh.

Jessica said...

I think it's great that the government is acknowledging that this is a problem and pushing forward to help responsible homeowners who just got in over their heads, but I think we are becoming too dependent on our government to bail us out. We need programs to help wean us off government aid. People need to realize that we can't live that extravagent lifestyle that we see in the media. People buy huge homes and then they need cars, furniture, clothing, accessories, entertainment... and start to drown in it all. If I can throw in some terms from Chapter One, some of us need to forget about a higher standard of living (if it's truly above our means) and focus on the quality of life.