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| The Buck Stops Here: How Securitization Changed the Rules for Ordinary Americans |
The Subprime Crisis: How We Got There From Here
For most Americans, home ownership is the foundation of a successful
life. But that’s no longer true for millions who bought their homes with subprime
mortgages, riskier loans made to people with less credit worthiness.
Owning a home has also become a nightmare for the thousands who were
the victims of predatory lending scams and who ended up with far higher
mortgage payments than they could afford. Such predicaments, far more
common in recent years, are the major reasons why about one in eleven
mortgages were past due or in foreclosure by the end of March, according
to a June report issued by the Mortgage Bankers Association.
The problems were years in the making. But churches were among the first
to notice something was seriously amiss, said Patricia Zerega, acting director
of the Corporate Social Responsibility Program of the Evangelical
Lutheran Church. (The Evangelical Lutheran Church, like other religious
institutions quoted in this article, are members of the Interfaith Center on
Corporate Responsibility, which promotes social justice through responsible
corporate and individual investment.)
“So many members of the church community are involved in anti-poverty
and housing programs,” Zerega said. “We began to hear complaints on the
ground, from parishioners, years ago.” In the end, when too many government
officials seemed oblivious, members of ICCR served as prophetic
voices, speaking truth to power.
Subprime mortgages came about as a way to extend credit to lower-income
people. They became more common after the passage in 1977 of the federal
Community Reinvestment Act, which encouraged banks to lend money
in their local communities. The current economic downturn may have given
subprime mortgages a bad name, but they are necessary, even laudable,
under some circumstances, Zerega stressed. After all, not everyone has perfect
credit and many cannot come close to buying a house with a 20 percent
down payment that would gain favorable interest rates. That’s why subprime
mortgages can, when lent responsibly with reasonable terms, give lowincome
applicants with less-than-spotless credit histories access to home
ownership when conventional mortgages would be otherwise unavailable.
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