Posted by Todd Zywicki:
"Let's Treat Borrowers Like Adults":
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_07_05-2009_07_11.shtml#1247055343


   My latest Wall Street Journal contribution, "Let's Treat Borrowers
   Like Adults: The problems with a financial products safety panel" is
   available [1]here.

   The basic point of the piece is that there were a lot of bad loans
   that were made over the past decade (duh). But the primary problem
   with these loans was the combination of bad Federal Reserve monetary
   policy and the bad incentives that they created for borrowers when
   house values fell. Although there certainly were borrowers who were
   defrauded by lenders (and lenders defrauded by borrowers) the
   underlying problem was caused by incentives and rational responses to
   those incentives.

   But this means that many of the loans that were made presented
   profound issues of safety and soundness for the banking system. But
   not problems of consumer protection. When a borrower who put nothing
   down rationally and knowingly responds to incentives to walk away from
   an underwater house, especially in a state with an anti-deficiency law
   which makes this strategy largely costless, this presents a major
   problem of safety and soundness. But it is not a consumer protection
   issue. Treating it as a consumer protection issue when it isn't, I
   argue, could have severe unintended consequences for competition,
   consumer choice, and the safety and soundness of the banking industry,
   as well as creating a problematic new bureaucracy.

References

   1. 
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124701284222009065.html#articleTabs%3Darticle

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