The McCain plan raises the serious concerns that plague all such ideas: It would benefit borrowers and lenders who made bad decisions . . . Though Mr. McCain preached against moral hazard earlier in this campaign, his team now says that the crisis has overtaken such concerns and that it's appropriate for government to pick up the tab for selected homeowners' lost equity. But unless Mr. McCain can demonstrate that this concession to borrowers is needed to alleviate the crisis and would be more effective than other measures already adopted by the Bush administration, the cost will be hard to justify.
It is axiomatic that the federal government is the one entity that can grant time to homeowners to repay their debts and keep their homes. Because the federal government does not have share prices or difficulty in raising capital, it does not have to demand high mortgage payments and fast repayment. It is these very facts that make the federal government the proper entity for purchasing distressed mortgages and negotiating new payment terms that can keep ordinary Americans in their homes. The federal government does not need balloon repayments, does not need short term appreciation of home prices, does not need high monthly mortgage payments. It can take a 5 year ARM mortgage loan with a balloon and exchange it for an affordable 30 year fixed term mortgage that keeps American families in their homes.
None of this requires a handout to the homeowner in the sense of forgiving debt. This is providing the refinancing that these homeowners were told would be available because of appreciating home prices. This is what HOLC was in the FDR Administration (HOLC ended up making a profit for the government) and it is what a modern day HOLC should be.
Earlier, I posted on how the federal government is going to inject capital into financial institutions by taking equity stakes in them. This is a good plan for the financial institutions and for the country. It brings needed liquidity to these institutions and the credit market without being a corporate giveaway. Indeed, for diluted shareholders, it is a bitter pill. But better a smaller piece of something of value than a larger piece of a worthless bankrupt company (ask Lehman Brothers shareholders if they would have like the feds to buy stock in Lehman. Ask AIG shareholders if they are happy about the government stake in AIG.)
But homeowners are ordinary Americans trying to pay their bills and keep a roof over their heads. A HOLC pan is not a handout in the sense that debt would be forgiven. The debt is being refinanced, by the last institution that can. This is a classic situation for why we need government - when all else has failed - and it has - then the government must step in. Not doing a HOLC will leave the country in a terrible mess.
I have written about the Common Good many times in the past. HOLC is a classic example of what the Democrat vision of the Common Good should be - helping ordinary Americans in a way that helps the country as a whole. It is a classic act of progressivism and what the Democratic Party must be about.
By Big Tent Democrat, speaking for me only