Posts Tagged ‘foreclosures’

“Geithner Blocking Legal Help For Foreclosure Victims”

Evans Liberal Politics
December 16, 2010

 

“Geithner Blocking Legal Help For Foreclosure Victims”

“Geithner Blocking Legal Help For Foreclosure Victims”, Daily Kos, December 15, 2010, by Bob Swern, used with permission, cartoon © Dave Granlund, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

Zach Carter’s most recent post over at HuffPo reminds us that anyone who thinks that Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner gives little more than the steam off of his piss and some lip service to homeowners facing foreclosure is, simply, kidding themselves.Yesterday, I posted a diary entitled: 50-State Foreclosure Fraud AG: ‘We will put people in jail.’ Among a handful of related sub-topics on foreclosure fraud covered in that post, it was very much about the government’s failed HAMP (mortgage modification) program, which has turned out to be a pathetically lame effort to, supposedly, keep people in their homes. In fact, as that blog entry explains in great detail, HAMP was/is little more than another veiled bailout for the Wall St. too-big-to-fail banks.

evocative cartoon about mortgage foreclosures and the sad Christmases many former homeowners will have

As Georgetown Law Professor Adam Levitan, widely considered to be one of the country’s leading consumer advocates when it comes to foreclosure law, noted in the post (h/t to Naked Capitalism Publisher Yves Smith):

Ultimately, the message to take away from HAMP is that the Obama administration just isn’t serious about helping homeowners. The plight of distressed homeowners’ is subsidiary to protecting the banks from having to take serious write-downs. There’s plenty to say about the politics of that decision, but from an economics perspective, I just think it’s short-sighted. The economy will not see a robust recovery until there is serious consumer deleveraging and a stabilization of the housing market. Those two problems go hand in hand, given that mortgage debt is the biggest chunk of consumer leverage. And there really isn’t any way to deleverage consumers without there being losses for the financial sector.

So, without further ado, here’s a link to the blatant and disgusting truth, as explained in a piece of reality dished-up at HuffPo (and Alternet) by Zach Carter: “Geithner Blocking Legal Help For Foreclosure Victims.”

Geithner Blocking Legal Help For Foreclosure Victims
Zach Carter
Huffington Post
Updated: 12-15-10 11:19 AMWASHINGTON–Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has authorized big payouts to banks in an effort to encourage mortgage modifications, but is preventing borrowers in danger of losing their homes from accessing legal assistance under the Obama administration’s foreclosure relief plan — even when banks are wrongfully or fraudulently attempting evictions…

Carter continues on to explain:

–In 2008, the Treasury Secretary was granted broad discretionary power by Congress to fund virtually all efforts necessary to prevent foreclosures.

–In fact, the Treasury Secretary approved $7.6 billion in outlays to help states prevent foreclosures and modify mortgages, too. However, “…the rules dictate that funding cannot be used for legal aid, dramatically blunting the impact of the program.”

Just so we’re clear here: banks and investment houses may spend billions in taxpayer-provided funds on lawyers, lobbyists and p.r. services; but, to reiterate it, even when consumer foreclosure advocacy money is preauthorized on the hill…

…the rules dictate that funding cannot be used for legal aid, dramatically blunting the impact of the program. States initially applied for funds from the program in the spring of this year, but the Treasury refused to extend money for tackling legal bills. For cash-strapped borrowers battling foreclosure, such legal fees can make the costs of defending their homes insurmountable. Consumer advocates say the Treasury’s legal reasoning is specious……”I don’t see anything specific that would prohibit them from using this money for legal aid attorneys,” says Ira Rheingold, executive director of the National Association of Consumer Advocates…

Carter tells us that Ohio Senator Sherrod Brown and 30 members of the House of Representatives sent a letter to Tim Geithner asking him to reconsider his position. But, “Geithner refused,” as it was noted in a memo issued by Treasury General Counsel George Madison.

The memo claimed that…

…Legal aid services are not necessary and incidental, as a matter of law, to the implementation or effectiveness of the HFA Hardest-Hit Fund, because: (1) Congress has provided other specific appropriations that fund the same type of legal aid services proposed by the state Housing Finance Agencies (“HFAs”); and (2) legal aid services are not necessary or essential to the implementation of a loan modification program…

Of course, Geithner’s lead counsel was talking about a HAMP loan modification program which, as Yves Smith pointed out just yesterday

…leaves 95% of borrowers in a worse negative equity position than before.Worse, a formula in the HAMP program allowed banks to focus the mod program on the high negative equity homes. These were the ones the banks with large second mortgage portfolios were least likely to foreclose upon, since in those cases, the second lien would clearly be wiped out. Admittedly, they would also be the ones where a mod is a bigger win for the investor…

So, I’m sure we’re all simply shocked to read that Carter also comes to the conclusion that the benefits to Wall Street are quite obvious. Blocking legal assistance to Main Street “…will result  in fewer challenged foreclosures, and bigger bank profits from the foreclosure process. It will also prevent the public release of loan documents which investors might use to sue banks where mortgages have been improperly handled.”

Well, we can’t let that happen, can we? Then again….Yes. We. Can!

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Obama Calls the Question on Geithner

Evans Liberal Politics
October 12, 2010

 

Obama Calls the Question on Geithner


Obama Calls the Question on Geithner, Common Dreams.org, October 11, 2010, by Robert Kuttner – original post on The Huffington Post, quoted verbatim:

By pocket-vetoing the bill that sailed through Congress to expedite mortgage foreclosures, President Obama may have begun a chain reaction that will blow up Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner’s confidence game with the banks. Let me explain.
Michael Shear:

Webroot Software Inc.

In early 2009, Obama and his top economic aides faced a fateful choice: either do an honest accounting of the nation’s big insolvent banks, like Citigroup; or keep propping them up and collude with the banks in camouflaging just how bad things were — and still are.

They opted for camouflage. Geithner and the Federal Reserve devised a “stress test” exercise that avoided an honest accounting of the junk on the banks’ balance sheets; instead they used economic models based on very rosy assumptions about how bad the recession would be. Citi and the others were pronounced basically healthy.

This move avoided the kind of reckoning that would break up (and clean up) the big banks. Instead, the camouflage policy allowed the big banks to very slowly rebuild their balance sheets with speculative profit centers, relying first on TARP money and then on zero interest rate advances from the Federal Reserve.

But there was a huge downside for the economy. The banks reverted to the same kind of speculative plays that crashed the system; they also continued gouging consumers. And thanks to the Federal Reserve, the banks could make very easy money borrowing from the Fed at almost zero interest rates and investing the money in government guaranteed Treasury securities.

By 2010, the banks were again making large profits and paying huge bonuses — as if the financial collapse had never occurred. What they did not, however, do was make very many loans to small and medium sized businesses or hard pressed consumers.

Meanwhile, regional and community banks, which do make loans to business, have been hard hit by the collapse in commercial real estate prices, and have tightened terms for ordinary business borrowers. So all but the largest businesses, which can access the bond market directly, are starved for credit.

Thanks to Geithner’s permissive accounting standards, the big banks have also been allowed to carry on their books at full value securities based on underwater mortgage loans — securities that are really worth between 30 and 70 cents on the dollar. If the banks had to honestly account for their depressed market value, the banks’ balance sheets would look even worse.

This is an exact repetition of what befell Japan in the 1990s — a lost decade of economic growth caused by a financial collapse and the collusion of the government with the banks to pretend that all was rosy. Indeed, the US economy today is in far worse shape than Japan was, because all during that period Japan continued to be a major export power while the US today runs a huge trade deficit.

But Obama’s veto of the foreclosure-streamlining bill calls the question on Geithner. We are now learning that a lot of the securities were not properly documented, which makes them worth even less.

If the foreclosure machinery is suddenly gummed up because the President has ruled out a quick fix that favors bankers, the banks may be forced to recognize what the junk on their balance sheets is really worth (not much). And the whole game of pretending that all is fine with the banks is in jeopardy.

The fact is that a vast number of mortgages that we turned into mortgage backed securities are legally flawed. This calls into further question the value of massive portfolios held by banks — and forces some kind of reckoning.

For aficionados who want more detail, Mike Konczal has provided a very useful idiots’ guide to the next great unraveling.

Obama’s veto also pulls the rug out from under the pretense that the Administration’s mortgage relief program is working. For nearly two years, the Treasury and the Department of Housing and Urban Development have sponsored a mortgage modification program known as HAMP (Home Affordable Modification Program).

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This program is voluntary to the banks, who get a few thousand dollars in incentive payments from the government in exchange for reducing monthly payments. But the relief is usually shallow and something like half of borrowers who do get modifications go back into default. Fewer than 500,000 have gotten modifications out of several million at risk of foreclosure.

Most of the underwater homeowners, now almost one in three, are not speculators or people who took out sub-prime loans. They are simply ordinary Americans whose houses are suddenly worth less than the mortgages on them, because of the general collapse in housing prices.

The lame HAMP program, the joint creation of Treasury and HUD, is another part of Geithner’s grand design to disguise just how bad things are at the big banks and prevent an honest accounting or a serious reckoning.

Meanwhile, housing prices are declining again, despite record low mortgage interest rates (available only to blue chip borrowers), which creates another serious drag on the economy. And the housing market won’t return to normal until the mortgage mess is resolved.

But the belated recognition that millions of mortgages are inadequately documented could be a blessing in disguise. It could force the administration to come up with stronger medicine both to clean up the banks and to help distressed homeowners.

The Dodd-Frank Act (PDF) gives the Treasury the tools to do an honest accounting of the big banks, and shut down or break up zombie banks that are insolvent — so that successor banks can get on with the business of lending. With a serious strategy for both the banks and the mortgage mess, we could remove two of the main drags on the economy.

White House political chief David Axelrod, speaking on CBS’s Face the Nation Sunday, tried to back-pedal from the significance of Obama’s action. (Heaven forbid that three weeks before a crucial election Obama should sound like he is siding with consumers against bankers.) Meanwhile, the indispensable Rep. Alan Grayson of Florida called for a national moratorium on foreclosures.

Of the three prime architects of Obama’s inadequate economic program, two have now moved on — economic policy czar Larry Summers and budget chief Peter Orszag. It’s time to for Geithner to join them, so that Obama can get real about the banking and mortgage crisis.

The president’s veto of the foreclosure bill shows that his Obama’s own instincts are better than his advisors’. It’s a start. But if Obama temporizes now, he faces a slow unraveling of the flimsy financial house that Geithner built, and an even weaker economy.

Robert Kuttner is co-editor of The American Prospect, and a senior fellow at Demos. His latest book is A Presidency in Peril.

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Bankers Broke The Economy And Got Rich Doing It

Evans Liberal Politics
October 3, 2010

 

Bankers Broke The Economy And Got Rich Doing It


Bankers Broke The Economy And Got Rich Doing It, Campaign for America’s Future, October 1, 2010, by Zach Carter, quoted verbatim:

Today’s absurd William Cohan column actually argues that we don’t need consumer protections in banking—nevermind the subprime explosion, the $8 trillion dollar housing bubble or the 1.2 million foreclosures expected this year. Nevermind the $38 billion in overdraft fees the banking industry reaped in 2009, or the ridiculous fine-print on credit cards. Nope, in William Cohan’s crazy world, the mortgage crisis was basically a problem caused by idiot consumers who—according to Cohan– don’t even deserve basic legal protections.

(Note by Evans Liberal Politics owner Paul Evans: last year the banks had a profit of "only" $12 billion. But they charged obscene overdraft fees totaling the just-mentioned $38 billion. So without their immoral, calculated, software-driven overdraft fees, the banking industry would have lost $26 billion. In other words they had to screw everyman in order to be profitable.)

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Cohan makes only two real points in his column, both of them profoundly stupid. The silliest objection is his obviously disingenuous sticker-shock at the $500-million-a-year budget the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will have:

“In an era of huge budget deficits and a depleted treasury, that’s a lot of money for taxpayers to fork over every year to support a new government bureaucracy designed to protect us from our own worst impulses.”

Nobody who knows anything about budgets could be appalled by this number. Even by the standards of government bureaucracy, the CFPB’s funding is paltry. It’s only 10% of the Fed’s annual budget, and about half of the SEC’s. Eliminating or quintupling the CFPB’s funding would be totally insignificant to the overall federal budget. But even if this number did matter, Cohan’s analysis is preposterously short-sighted.

Employing a police force seems like a waste of taxpayer dollars until you get robbed, and so it is with financial regulation. Right now the U.S. economy struggling through a horrible recession, which has included significant government expenditures to bailout Wall Street and keep the job market afloat. All of this was caused by a predatory lending binge financed and implemented by Wall Street. Decent consumer protections would have prevented the housing bubble from getting totally out of control, and would have prevented Wall Street from destroying itself. If it costs us $500 million a year to save 8 million jobs, $8 trillion in household wealth, and $4 trillion in bailout money, that seems like a pretty good  deal to me.This budgetary argument holds no matter who is responsible for the mortgage crisis, be they banks or borrowers, predatory or pristine. But Cohan doubles down on his idiocy, saying that actually, borrowers don’t deserve to be protected from predatory banks.

Like virtually every senseless diatribe against the CFPB written over the past two years, this attack isn’t directed against the CFPB itself, but against the very idea of consumer protection—something that has been a common-sense element of bank regulation for centuries. Things got off track over the past thirty years (with accelerating aggressiveness during the Bush years) as bank regulators simply stopped enforcing consumer protection laws.

The CFPB does not create some wild new standard of regulation—it’s just an effort to ensure that somebody actually enforces the basic consumer protection mandate that existing regulators have ignored. The existing regulators failed, because they’re more worried about short-term bank profitability—the more money a bank makes, the less likely it is to fail, and the less likely that the regulator will be embarrassed by a disastrous bank failure. To existing agencies, it doesn’t matter where that profitability comes from—if it’s from predatory lending, they’ll just look the other way. The CFPB breaks this perverse incentive structure by establishing an agency that only works with consumer protection issues—not bank profitability.

Cohan waits until the final paragraph of his column to deliver the “evidence” for why we don’t need a CFPB, and he gets it completely, horribly wrong.

“Yes, some people who have lost their homes were victims of fraudulent mortgage brokers and shady lenders. But the vast majority of those who held the billions of dollars in mortgages now foreclosed on knew exactly what they were doing. And one of the dirty little secrets of the financial crisis is that one homeowner after another signed mortgage-loan documents that were filled with inaccurate information about his or her net worth, assets, salaries and ability to make monthly mortgage payments. Why would someone sign a loan document knowing full well the information on it was inaccurate and the mortgage could never be repaid?”

The only real statistic on mortgage fraud comes from the FBI, and it doesn’t back up Cohan’s claims at all. As early as 2004, the FBI was warning about an “epidemic” in mortgage fraud—not a few bad apples, not “some people,” but an epidemic . We know that mortgage fraud was standard operating procedure at Washington Mutual, now part of JPMorgan Chase, and they weren’t alone—for five years, rampant fraud was a basic component of the U.S. mortgage machine. And according to the FBI, 80 percent—repeat, 80 percent—of this fraud was perpetrated by the lender.

So, let’s answer Cohan’s question. Why would people knowingly set themselves up for foreclosure? They wouldn’t! The key incentives for fraud and deception do not apply to rational borrowers who want to live in their homes. They apply to lenders, who were being paid very well to push borrowers into unaffordable mortgages. Bankers and brokers were paid kickbacks to steer borrowers into subprime loans, when those same borrowers would have qualified for ordinary mortgages. With heavy demand for mortgage-backed securities on Wall Street, banks knew they could issue garbage loans and stick other investors with the tab—so they did. The list of lenders who pawned their crappy loans off onto other people includes many of the biggest names in finance: Wells Fargo, Wachovia, Citigroup Bank of America, Countrywide, Washington Mutual and more. Banks stood to make a lot of money from fraud. Borrowers, by contrast, could count on foreclosure. Who do you think is going to falsify the income on loan applications?

Sure, there were borrowers who tried to game the system. But the story of mortgage fraud in the housing bubble is overwhelmingly a story of malpractice by bonus-crazed bankers, not borrowers. We need Elizabeth Warren and the CFPB to protect our economy from such abuses. This is a question of basic law enforcement, something Cohan apparently believes should not apply to ordinary citizens looking to buy a home.

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As Treasury Department Stumbles, Liberals Push Tougher Measures to Stem Foreclosures

Evans Politics, November 30, 2009

 

As Treasury Department Stumbles,
Liberals Push Tougher Measures to Stem Foreclosures

 

As Treasury Department Stumbles, Liberals Push Tougher Measures to Stem Foreclosures, Truthout, November 30, 2009, by Art Levine, cartoon by Dave Granlund used with permission, quoted verbatim:

With today’s scheduled announcement by the Treasury Department of new efforts to pressure lenders to lower mortgage costs, progressive economists, advocacy groups and legislators are pushing for tougher measures to keep homeowners in their homes – and to force banks to take losses on their exploding mortgages.

In contrast, the Obama administration’s response to a crisis that is causing two million families a year to face the loss of their homes has been widely derided as ineffective. The programs so far have been voluntary plans that proved too costly for homeowners, too cumbersome for all parties involved and have offered few effective incentives. As a result, only a tiny fraction of homeowners at risk of foreclosure – as little as 3 percent for some programs – have been helped in any way.

well known cartoon of the sadness of homes with foreclosure signs at Christmas time

Yet the administration instead is going to focus on a new drive to “shame” the shameless bankers and financial institutions that have already gouged trillions in bailouts and guarantees from the taxpayer. This is the same industry that has also torpedoed or weakened mortgage and financial reforms in Congress. Still, the New York Times reported:

“The banks are not doing a good enough job,” Michael S. Barr, Treasury’s assistant secretary for financial institutions, said in an interview Friday. “Some of the firms ought to be embarrassed, and they will be.”

Mr. Barr said the government would try to use shame as a corrective, publicly naming those institutions that move too slowly to permanently lower mortgage payments. The Treasury Department also will wait until reductions are permanent before paying cash incentives that it promised to mortgage companies that lower loan payments.

“They’re not getting a penny from the federal government until they move forward,” Mr. Barr said.

Liz Ryan Murray, the policy director for National People’s Action, a network of community advocacy groups, said bluntly of the announcement, “It’s a joke. There’s still no talk of reforming the program, or using TARP money to bail people out. It’s just a plan to make servicers feel bad.”

And as Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research and a proponent of a “right-to-rent” approach to aid at-risk homeowners, told Truthout, “We need to change the law rather than haranguing lenders. When someone’s running drugs, we don’t try to shame them – we put them in jail.”

Unfortunately, getting tougher on crooked lenders – then and now – doesn’t seem to be a priority, either. Some reform-minded legislators, especially Ohio Democrat Marcy Kaptur, have contended that homeowners should stay in their homes in part because many of the loans were fraudulent and deceptive. In addition, she’s been seeking additional law enforcement resources devoted to prosecuting lending fraud. As she told The Nation recently:

“Mortgage fraud is at the heart of the housing crisis, which is at the heart of the financial crisis. After 9/11, the FBI redeployed financial special agents to anti-terrorism, but they have yet to replace those agents in the White Collar Crime Division – even though the division had warned in 2004 of the threat of a mortgage fraud ‘epidemic.’ We were under the understanding that [the Department of] Justice was under 200 prosecutors and investigative agents in the area of mortgage and securities fraud, and so we were pushing to increase that number. Our goal was 1,000 agents – we didn’t come anywhere near close to that – but 1,000 agents is the number that were in place during the savings and loan crisis back in the late eighties.”

Equally troubling, in the absence of any real mortgage reform, is the spread of bogus foreclosure-assistance companies that are stealing yet more money from homeowners under the guise of renegotiating their mortgages.

Even as criminal lenders and scam artists remain unpunished, the program the administration is hoping to salvage has several built-in flaws that could doom its ability to help the millions needing it – especially with one in four homeowners now owing more than their homes are worth. That’s a sign of potential foreclosures to come. For instance, as Dean Baker and other experts point out, the HAMP initiative was designed for employed homeowners who were victimized by predatory, subprime loans they just couldn’t afford to pay in full. It excludes today’s struggling homeowners who are unemployed and who are “underwater,” faced with paying off a mortgage that is worth far more than the house’s now-collapsed value. “If you owe $300,000 on a house that’s worth $200,000,” Baker notes, “the banks won’t write down that much.”

The government’s weak incentives so far – and verbal tongue-lashings being promised today – aren’t likely to remedy this crisis. It’s not just that it took quite a while for Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner’s department to realize it wasn’t such a bright idea to essentially pay all the renegotiating incentive money up front to financial institutions still determined to kick people out of their homes. On top of that, the amount of fees that mortgage companies can generate by servicing delinquent loans often exceeds the incentives the government offers out of its floundering $75 billion program. As the New York Times reported back in July, “Many mortgage companies are reluctant to give strapped homeowners a break because the companies collect lucrative fees on delinquent loans.” The paper noted:

Even when borrowers stop paying, mortgage companies that service the loans collect fees out of the proceeds when homes are ultimately sold in foreclosure. So the longer borrowers remain delinquent, the greater the opportunities for these mortgage companies to extract revenue – fees for insurance, appraisals, title searches and legal services.”

The lack of meaningful pressure on financial institutions to either increase lending or renegotiate mortgages has hampered everything from the wasteful $700 billion TARP bailout to the bungled foreclosure programs.

As I had earlier reported in In These Times, and widely noted by everyone from the New York Times to the Congressional Oversight Panel on the TARP program, the current programs have flopped so badly they’ve only reached – let alone permanently helped – as few as 3 percent and, at best, less than half of eligible homeowners.

The programs include a now-abandoned fiasco in HUD that only aided a few hundred homeowners in its early months, and the better-known “Home Affordable Program” (HAMP) and a related refinancing effort in Treasury that have offered permanent aid to only a few thousand homeowners. As The New York Times reported Sunday:

From its inception early this year, the Obama administration’s program, called Making Home Affordable, has been dogged by persistent questions about whether it could diminish a swelling wave of foreclosures. Some economists argued that the plan was built for last year’s problem – exotic mortgages whose payments increased – and not for the current menace of soaring joblessness. Lawyers who defend homeowners against foreclosure maintained that mortgage companies collect lucrative fees from long-term delinquency, undercutting their incentive to lower payments to affordable levels.

Last month, an oversight panel created by Congress reported that fewer than 2,000 of the 500,000 loan modifications then in progress had become permanent under Making Home Affordable. When the Treasury releases new numbers next month, it is expected to report a disappointingly small number of permanent loan modifications, with estimates in the tens of thousands out of the more than 650,000 borrowers now in the program.

Yet another program in Treasury is even more of a failure, if that’s possible. As The Washington Post reported last month:

A seven-month-old government program to help homeowners with little or no equity refinance their mortgages has so far reached fewer than 3 percent of those targeted, with many struggling borrowers deciding that the benefits of a new loan aren’t worth the closing costs.

This lackluster performance reflects the difficulty of helping the growing segment of “underwater” homeowners – those who owe more than their home is worth.

The program is a key component of the Obama administration’s efforts to stabilize the housing market and arrest the nation’s growing foreclosure rate. But the initiative has received far less public attention than its companion, a loan modification program that pays lenders to lower the payments of delinquent borrowers who are in imminent danger of losing their homes.

The refinancing program targets borrowers who are not in trouble on their mortgage now but, because they are underwater, are at risk of falling into trouble later.

Dean Baker and other reformers, including leaders of theNational People’s Action advocacy network and the Center for Responsible Lending, are promoting what could be better ideas. They aim unabashedly to keep homeowners in their homes and force financial institutions to take losses on their loans, but so far there has been little Congressional or administration action on them. Nor are Washington insiders willing to take on the financial industry on this issue, even as they’re trying to pass often loophole-laden financial reforms against a lobbying blitzkrieg by Wall Street.

Baker’s right-to-rent proposal, he argues, offers benefits that even other reform ideas don’t necessarily provide. For instance, earlier in the spring, a law designed to spur “cram-down” decisions by judges to force lower mortgage payments failed in the Senate after passing the House. Senator Dick Durbin (D-Ill) said of the fierce financial industry lobbying that defeated the bill: “Frankly, they own the place.” Yet Baker’s approach to allow homeowners to pay fair-market rent rates doesn’t depend on hoping that a bankruptcy judge after a drawn-out process will finally give a homeowner a break.

Nor does Baker’s proposal require an elaborate bureaucracy, armed with fee incentives, to prod profit-driven mortgage service companies to lower required mortgage payments. “It doesn’t involve the taxpayers’ money and it doesn’t involve a bureaucracy,” he notes. “You don’t need a bureaucracy to guarantee that people can stay in their homes.” Yet while it’s costly to neighborhoods and even to banks to have homes remain empty without a sale after families are forced out, banks are still counting on either government guarantees or the market’s rebound to make it worth the wait to resell the homes, rather than take any losses.

So, as with other reforms, “the banks hate it,” Baker admits.

As previously reported in In These Times, reform groups are offering a wide-ranging agenda for mortgage relief that is largely being ignored. For instance, at its Save the American Dream web site and in other materials, National People’s Action has outlined the basic principles of reform, including fixing HAMP. Few of them appear to be on their way to being effectively implemented:

IMMEDIATE RELIEF TO KEEP FAMILIES IN THEIR HOMES
Mortgage industry must:
• Disclose ownership of loans before foreclosure.
• Modify loans to be permanently affordable.
• Halt massive interest rate hikes.
• Allow servicers the greatest flexibility to modify these loans.
• Create a refinance loan for homeowners stuck in unaffordable loans.
• Employ salaried loan officers, not commissioned-based loan officers.

The Treasury Department Must Dramatically Improve HAMP

Servicers must be pressured to increase dramatically the number of permanent modifications being made.

Treasury must mandate principal reduction as a primary tool to solve foreclosures, not just as a last resort.

HAMP cannot be a ‘one-strike’ program. Families need the ability to reapply to the program if and when their situations change.

Treasury must make the HAMP process more transparent and implement a true appeals process so families in foreclosure can see how to qualify and have recourse if they are rejected by their servicer.

Instead of such tough-minded reforms of current practices, the administration is instead primarily relying on “shame” to prod the financial services industry to change its ways and save homeowners. As former Labor Secretary Robert Reich declared on his blog Sunday:

The $75 billion federal program designed to bribe banks to modify mortgages has been a bust. No one knows the exact number of mortgages that have been modified (that will be reported next month) but housing experts I’ve talked with say it’s a tiny fraction of the number of homeowners in trouble. Seems that the big banks can’t be bothered. “Some of the firms ought to be embarrassed,” Michael Barr, the assistant Treasury secretary for financial institutions told The New York Times. Barr says the government will try to use shame as a corrective, publicly naming institutions that have moved too slowly.

Shame? If we’ve learned anything over the last year, it’s that Wall Street has none. Eight months ago Wall Street lobbyist beat back a proposal to give bankruptcy judges the right to amend mortgages in order to pressure lenders to reduce principal owed, just like Wall Street lobbyists are now beating back tough regulations to prevent the Street from causing another meltdown. Goldman Sachs, attempting to pre-empt a firestorm of public outrage when it dispenses its $17 billion of bonuses, is setting up a crudely conceived $500 million PR program to help Main Street.

Shame won’t work. Only political muscle and courage will.