Did Liberals Cause the Sub-Prime Crisis?

Conservatives blame the housing crisis on a 1977 law that helps-low
income people get mortgages. It's a useful story for them, but it
isn't true.

Robert Gordon | April 7, 2008 | web only        

The idea started on the outer precincts of the right. Thomas
DiLorenzo, an economist who calls Ron Paul "the Jefferson of our
time," wrote in September that the housing crisis is "the direct
result of thirty years of government policy that has forced banks to
make bad loans to un-creditworthy borrowers." The policy DiLorenzo
decries is the 1977 Community Reinvestment Act, which requires banks
to lend throughout the communities they serve.

The Blame-CRA theme bounced around the right-wing Freerepublic.com. In
January it figured in a Washington Times column. In February, a Cato
Institute affiliate named Stan Liebowitz picked up the critique in a
New York Post op-ed headlined "The Real Scandal: How the Feds Invented
the Mortgage Mess." On The National Review's blog, The Corner, John
Derbyshire channeled Liebowitz: "The folk losing their homes? are
victims not of 'predatory lenders,' but of government-sponsored -- in
fact government-mandated -- political correctness."

Last week, a more careful expression of the idea hit The Washington
Post, in an article on former Sen. Phil Gramm's influence over John
McCain. While two progressive economists were quoted criticizing
Gramm's insistent opposition to government regulation, the Brookings
Institution's Robert Litan offered an opposing perspective. Litan
suggested that the 1990s enhancement of CRA, which was achieved over
Gramm's fierce opposition, may have contributed to the current crisis.
"If the CRA had not been so aggressively pushed," Litan said, "it is
conceivable things would not be quite as bad. People have to be honest
about that."

This is classic rhetoric of conservative reaction. (For fans of
welfare policy, it is Charles Murray meets the mortgage mess.) Most
analysts see the sub-prime crisis as a market failure. Believing the
bubble would never pop, lenders approved risky adjustable-rate
mortgages, often without considering whether borrowers could afford
them; families took on those loans; investors bought them in
securitized form; and, all the while, regulators sat on their hands.

The revisionists say the problem wasn't too little regulation; but too
much, via CRA. The law was enacted in response to both intentional
redlining and structural barriers to credit for low-income
communities. CRA applies only to banks and thrifts that are federally
insured; it's conceived as a quid pro quo for that privilege, among
others. This means the law doesn't apply to independent mortgage
companies (or payday lenders, check-cashers, etc.)

The law imposes on the covered depositories an affirmative duty to
lend throughout the areas from which they take deposits, including
poor neighborhoods. The law has teeth because regulators' ratings of
banks' CRA performance become public and inform important decisions,
notably merger approvals. Studies by the Federal Reserve and Harvard's
Joint Center for Housing Studies, among others, have shown that CRA
increased lending and homeownership in poor communities without
undermining banks' profitability.

But CRA has always had critics, and they now suggest that the law went
too far in encouraging banks to lend in struggling communities.
Rhetoric aside, the argument turns on a simple question: In the
current mortgage meltdown, did lenders approve bad loans to comply
with CRA, or to make money?

The evidence strongly suggests the latter. First, consider timing. CRA
was enacted in 1977. The sub-prime lending at the heart of the current
crisis exploded a full quarter century later. In the mid-1990s, new
CRA regulations and a wave of mergers led to a flurry of CRA activity,
but, as noted by the New America Foundation's Ellen Seidman (and by
Harvard's Joint Center), that activity "largely came to an end by
2001." In late 2004, the Bush administration announced plans to
sharply weaken CRA regulations, pulling small and mid-sized banks out
from under the law's toughest standards. Yet sub-prime lending
continued, and even intensified -- at the very time when activity
under CRA had slowed and the law had weakened.

Second, it is hard to blame CRA for the mortgage meltdown when CRA
doesn't even apply to most of the loans that are behind it. As the
University of Michigan's Michael Barr points out, half of sub-prime
loans came from those mortgage companies beyond the reach of CRA. A
further 25 to 30 percent came from bank subsidiaries and affiliates,
which come under CRA to varying degrees but not as fully as banks
themselves. (With affiliates, banks can choose whether to count the
loans.) Perhaps one in four sub-prime loans were made by the
institutions fully governed by CRA.

Most important, the lenders subject to CRA have engaged in less, not
more, of the most dangerous lending. Janet Yellen, president of the
San Francisco Federal Reserve, offers the killer statistic:
Independent mortgage companies, which are not covered by CRA, made
high-priced loans at more than twice the rate of the banks and
thrifts. With this in mind, Yellen specifically rejects the "tendency
to conflate the current problems in the sub-prime market with
CRA-motivated lending.? CRA, Yellen says, "has increased the volume of
responsible lending to low- and moderate-income households."

Yellen is hardly alone in concluding that the real problems came from
the institutions beyond the reach of CRA. One of the only regulators
who long ago saw the current crisis coming was the late Ned Gramlich,
a former Fed governor. While Alan Greenspan was cheering the sub-prime
boom, Gramlich warned of its risks and unsuccessfully pushed for
greater supervision of bank affiliates. But Gramlich praised CRA,
saying last year, "banks have made many low- and moderate-income
mortgages to fulfill their CRA obligations, they have found default
rates pleasantly low, and they generally charge low mortgages rates.
Thirty years later, CRA has become very good business."

It's telling that, amid all the recent recriminations, even lenders
have not fingered CRA. That's because CRA didn't bring about the
reckless lending at the heart of the crisis. Just as sub-prime lending
was exploding, CRA was losing force and relevance. And the worst
offenders, the independent mortgage companies, were never subject to
CRA -- or any federal regulator. Law didn't make them lend. The profit
motive did.

And that is not political correctness. It is correctness.

[I'm a bit too tired to comment on the above.]
-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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