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Economists Call For Massive Debt Relief To Jumpstart Economy

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First Posted: 10/03/11 09:32 AM ET Updated: 12/03/11 05:12 AM ET

NEW YORK (Jennifer Ablan and Matthew Goldstein) - More than three years after the financial crisis struck, the economy remains stuck in a consumer debt trap. It's a situation that could take years to correct itself. That's why some economists are calling for a radical step: massive debt relief.

Federal policy makers, they suggest, should broker what amounts to an out-of-court settlement between institutional bond investors, banks and consumer advocates - essentially, a "great haircut" to jumpstart the economy.

What some are envisioning is a negotiated process in which cash-strapped homeowners get real mortgage relief, even if it means forcing banks to incur severe write-downs and bond investors to absorb haircuts, or losses, in some of the securities sold by those institutions.

"We've put this off for too long," said L. Randall Wray, a professor of economics at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. "We need debt relief and jobs and until we get these two things, I think recovery is impossible."

The bailout of the nation's banks, a nearly trillion dollar stimulus package and an array of programs by the Federal Reserve to keep interest rates near zero may have stopped the economy from falling into the abyss. But none of those measures have fixed the underlying problem of too much consumer debt.

At the start of the crisis, household debt as a percentage of gross domestic product was 100 percent. Today it's down to 90 percent of GDP. But by historical standards that is high. Households are still more indebted than their counterparts in Austria, Germany, Spain, France and even Greece - which is on the verge of defaulting on its government debt.

Tens of millions of citizens remain burdened with mortgages they can no longer afford, in addition to soaring credit card bills and sky high student loans. Trillions of dollars in outstanding consumer debt is stifling demand for goods and services and that's one reason economists say cash-rich U.S. companies are reluctant to hire and unemployment remains stubbornly high.

Take Donald Bonner, for example, a 61-year-old from Bayonne, New Jersey, who lost his job working on a dock in June. Back in March, he attended a "loan modification" fair held by JPMorgan Chase in New York. He has lived in his home since 1970, but was on the verge of losing his job. After falling behind on his $2,800-a-month mortgage, he sought to reduce his monthly payment. Bonner says the bank denied the request on the grounds that he is ineligible because his income is higher than the minimum threshold set by the Federal government for loan modifications.

"They keep asking me for additional documentation," Bonner said on Friday. "It seems to me there is never enough documentation and it has to be renewed every month. It does make you wonder with all this bailout money these banks have received, they don't want to lend the money."

DEBT JUBILEE

The idea of substantial debt restructurings and a haircut for bondholders has been raised by financial pundits, including Barry Ritholtz and Chris Whalen, two popular analysts and bloggers.

Renowned economist Stephen Roach, currently non-executive chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia, has gone a step further, calling for Wall Street to get behind what others have called a "Debt Jubilee" to forgive excess mortgage and credit card debt for some borrowers. The notion of a Debt Jubilee dates back to biblical Israel where debts were forgiven every 50 years or so. In an August appearance on CNBC, Roach said debt forgiveness would help consumers get through "the pain of deleveraging sooner rather than later." (here)

But it's not just the liberal economists and doom-and-gloom financial analysts calling for a great haircut. Even some institutional investors, who might suffer some of the impact of debt reductions on their portfolios, are seeing a need for a creative solution to the mess.

"If there is something constructive that can be done it should be," said Ash Williams, executive director of the Florida State Board of Administration, which oversees $145 billion in public investments and pension money. "You don't want to reward bad behavior and you don't want to reward people who were irresponsible. But if there is a way to do well by doing good, then let's take a look at it."

To be sure, consumer debt levels have been coming down since the crisis began. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York reported in August that outstanding consumer debt has fallen from a peak of $12.5 trillion in third quarter of 2008 to $11.4 trillion. (NY Fed report: tinyurl.com/3uuvk8d) That's a sign that consumers are getting less indebted.

But households are still carrying a staggering burden of debt.

As of June 30, roughly 1.6 million homeowners in the U.S. were either delinquent on mortgages or in some stage of the foreclosure process, according to CoreLogic. And the real estate data and analytics company reports that 10.9 million, or 22.5 percent, of homeowners are underwater on their mortgage -- meaning the value of their homes has fallen so much it is now below the value of their original loan. CoreLogic said the figure, which peaked at 11.3 million in the fourth quarter of 2009, has declined slightly not because home prices are appreciating but because a growing number of mortgages are entering foreclosure.

The nation's banks, meanwhile, still have more than $700 billion in home equity loans and other so-called second lien debt outstanding on those U.S. homes, according to SNL Financial.

Debts owed by American consumers account for almost half of the nearly $9 trillion in worldwide bonds backed by pools of mortgages, car loans, credit card debt and student loans, which were sold to hedge funds, insurers and pension funds and endowments.

And that doesn't include the $4.1 trillion in mortgage debt sold by government-sponsored finance firms Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Kenneth Rogoff, professor of economics and public policy at Harvard University and former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund, has said the ongoing crisis should be called the "Second Great Contraction" because households remain highly leveraged. He says the high level of consumer debt is what distinguishes this from other recessionary periods.

COMPETING INTERESTS

For those in favor of a radical solution, there are a lot of headwinds.

Any debt reduction initiative must confront the issue of "moral hazard" - the appearance of giving a gift to an unworthy borrower who simply made unwise spending choices.

Institutional investors who own securities backed by pools of mortgages are reluctant to see struggling homeowners get their mortgages reduced because that means those securities are suddenly worth less. Any write-downs that banks are forced to take could imperil their capital levels.

Banks and bondholders, meanwhile, have competing interests. This is because mortgage write-downs depress the value of the securities in which mortgages are pooled and sold to investors. Big institutional investors like BlackRock have long argued that any meaningful principal reduction on a mortgage must also include a willingness by banks to take their own write-downs on any home equity loans, or second liens, taken out by the borrower on the property. The banks continue to hold those second liens on their balance sheets and so far have been reluctant to mark down the value of those loans, even though the borrower often has fallen behind on their primary mortgage payments.

In other words, bondholders are taking the position if they must suffer losses, so must the banks.

"Institutional investors, pension funds and hedge funds all have fiduciary obligations and they can't necessarily agree to haircuts solely because it may be good social policy," Sylvie Durham, an attorney with Greenberg Traurig in New York, who practices in the structured finance and derivatives area.

Tad Rivelle, chief investment officer of fixed-income securities at TCW, which manages about $120 billion of which $65 billion is in U.S. fixed income, doesn't support a big haircut. But he says he can see why some economists and consumer advocates would favor debt reductions and debt workouts as way of dealing with the financial crisis and freeing up more money for spending.

Barry Ritholtz, director of equity research at Fusion IQ and a popular financial blogger, said the standoff between the banks and bondholders is untenable and doing a good deal of harm. An early critic of the bank bailouts, Ritholtz says bankers and bondholders are all in denial and both need to get far more pragmatic.

"They'd be bankrupt if not for the bailouts," says Ritholtz of the banks' position. "For their part, bondholders need to understand that we're not earning our way out of this mess and should eat losses now before they get nothing."

TIME FOR A MEDIATOR?

Given the standoff, there's a sense nothing will happen unless federal policymakers make the first move. The Fed reports that 71 percent of household debt in the U.S. is mortgage-related.

But so far Washington policymakers seem more content to rely on voluntary measures. The two main programs set up by the Obama administration to reduce home mortgage debt - the Home Affordable Refinance Program and the Home Affordable Modification Program - have had limited success.

To date, the Treasury Department reports that those voluntary programs have resulted in 790,000 mortgage modifications, saving those borrowers an average of $525 a month in payments. Many of those modifications, however, were for borrowers paying high interest rates, not ones underwater on their mortgages.

In fact, Bank of America, one of the nation's largest mortgage lenders, said it has offered just 40,000 principal reductions to its borrowers.

Administration sources told Reuters that they support the concept of carefully targeted principal reductions for underwater borrowers. But these sources, who did not want to be identified, say the administration cannot mandate banks and bondholders to accept any principal reductions absent Congress authorizing the procedure.

The sources point out that federal authorities don't have a "magic wand" - even at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-backed home-loan titans.

These sources explain that even though Fannie and Freddie are effectively owned by the federal government, they are controlled by an independent regulator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency. And it's up to the FHFA, and not the administration, to approve any principal reductions on home loans involving Fannie and Freddie.

An FHFA spokeswoman declined to comment. The agency has repeatedly taken the position that its first job is protect taxpayers' return on investment in Fannie and Freddie rather than reducing mortgages for underwater borrowers.

CLOCK TICKING

The fear of some economists is that the economy may be going into a double dip recession. That means precious time is being lost if a negotiated approach to debt reduction isn't taken now.

But the banks also have their own big debt burdens to deal with. Next year alone, banks and financial institutions must find a way to either pay off or refinance $307.8 billion in maturing debt, compared to the $182 billion that is coming due this year, according to Standard & Poor's.

This maturing debt for banks comes at a time when they must start raising capital to deal with new international banking standards and are facing the possibility of a new recession that will crimp earnings. (Bank of America story: link.reuters.com/sys63s)

Beyond bank debt, hundreds of billions of dollars in junk bonds sold to finance leveraged buyouts also are maturing soon. S&P says "the biggest risk" comes in 2013 and 2014, when $502 billion in speculative-grade debt comes due.

Still, there are still plenty of economists who say the concern about consumer debt is overdone and that doing anything radical now would only make things worse. One of those is Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody's Analytics, who says a forced write-down or haircut of debt "would only result in a much higher cost of capital going forward and result in much less credit to more risky investments."

He said significant progress has been made in reducing private sector debt, and draconian debt forgiveness measures would be a mistake. "Early in the financial crisis I was sympathetic to passing legislation to allow for first mortgage write-downs in a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, but the time for this idea has passed," says Zandi.

Still, the notion of a debt write-down and bondholder haircuts will probably be around as long as the unemployment rate stays high and the housing market remains depressed.

Indeed, it has been two years since the notion of a "Debt Jubilee" made it into the popular culture when Trey Parker and Matt Stone used it for an episode of the politically incorrect cartoon "South Park." In the episode aired in March 2009, (here) one of the characters used an unlimited credit card to pay off all the debts of the residents of South Park to spur the economy.

At the time, the idea seemed like just a funny satire on the nation's economic mess. But now it seems like no joke at all.

(Reporting by Jennifer Ablan and Matthew Goldstein; Additional reporting by David Henry and Joseph Rauch; Editing by Michael Williams and Claudia Parsons)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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NEW YORK (Jennifer Ablan and Matthew Goldstein) - More than three years after the financial crisis struck, the economy remains stuck in a consumer debt trap. It's a situation that could take years...
NEW YORK (Jennifer Ablan and Matthew Goldstein) - More than three years after the financial crisis struck, the economy remains stuck in a consumer debt trap. It's a situation that could take years...
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11:01 AM on 10/14/2011
If you bought your primary residence after 2003, you were cheated by the fradulent appraisal value of your house, and you should get a mortgage reduction by the drop of value of your primary residence.

If you don't have a house, you should be forgiven of your student loan, and probably half of your credit card debt.

If you have been lucky, you should be given a substantial tax reduction for being a responsible citizen.
08:05 AM on 10/05/2011
Let's take Jubilee further, Forgive all personal, corporate and government debt. Let's reboot the system. The situation in Greece is contagious from the austerity measures to violent protests.
Remember what happened in the Great Depression
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dtallwalk
08:24 PM on 10/04/2011
Let’s face it the consumer is the end of the line if we don’t pay the whole thing will claps
The banks side stepped the mess by getting bail outs. And with the bank backed republicans
The congress will not do a thing to help. So with people stuck in the mud with debt
And have no room to move it is a stale mate. Question is how long the banks will
Wait before doing something. Because banks are in business to make money
After all money is static time will force action. Either the banks are forced to Wright down
Debt or even more people walk away from their homes and down size their lifestyles
Like many I know and the interesting thing is I ask these friends so how’s has the change been
Most of the replies are positive. I ask will you buy a house in the future most say no
I will not go through that again to put it nicely.
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Kache
Citizens, Unite!
04:32 PM on 10/04/2011
Part1

I'm surprised that this article did not mention Simon Johnson's proposal at the annual conference of IMF & World Bank members just a week or so ago. He proposed writing down all mortgages taken out in a given time frame - I think it was 2003-2007 - on the basis that they were valued in a fraudulent appraisal period which dramatically, and fictitiously, inflated the mortgages. Making an across the board write-down to principal would eliminate the moral hazard for buyers - and punish the very banks that should have been buying property at the lowest price instead of the highest. Banks were buying at the highest appraisal because it increased their fees when they sold the mortgages to investors instead of buying at the lowest to protect their stockholders and depositors - as required by state laws that had been preempted by the Bush administration. Johnson's proposal would set a floor for home valuations by it's implementation (something the housing market desperately needs) , and reduce payments and principal for the very homeowners who are in trouble. By making it an across the board write-down, some would be unfairly excluded and some others unfairly included, but it would be fair to the vast majority of homeowners who did not buy in that rigged market and would oppose write-downs based on how badly the homebuyer had managed their purchase.
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Kache
Citizens, Unite!
04:32 PM on 10/04/2011
Part2

Johnson calculates that such a write-down would cost banks less than $500 billion, money they have. It would also drive down bank stock, which is overvalued by any measure anyhow. And, the very bondholders who encouraged the run up in home valuations would loss roughly every penny they made in the pyramid scheme over those years.

Now, will banks submit to such a scheme? Well, if the alternative is to fight out in court each and every one of millions of civil and criminal suits that they are facing, yeah. To that end, Johnson requested the 50 State Attorneys General to cease negotiating away the rights of citizens to sue banks in exchange for a piddling $30 billion. So far, New York, Delaware, and just the other day, California have pulled out of the settlement negotiations.
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JoeBlough
The Horror. . .The Horror. . .
02:16 PM on 10/04/2011
Massive debt relief should be coupled with massive 401K loss relief. All losers shouild be made whole.
01:31 PM on 10/04/2011
We can not fix problem caused by irresponsible behavior with more irresponsible behavior.
Talks of cuting the debt of homeowners if they are behind on their mortgage is pushing those who are paying to stop paying.
People (including bankers) have to profit from smart decisions and pay the price for their mistakes.
Otherwise the system collapses since it invites more irresponsible behavior.
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frank day
Obama cares about all of U.S.
02:13 PM on 10/04/2011
If Banksters had been made to pay the price for bad decisions,

the system would have collapsed.
02:19 PM on 10/04/2011
This is total non sense. The economy would collapse without banks but there were alternatives to funding banksters bonuses with tax dollars.
The feds should have taken over the banks. Cancel all agreements with upper management on compensation and bonuses.
Cap salaries to that of the US president and issue new loan directly to the public.
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rh1037
11:56 AM on 10/04/2011
Too tangled a web for the world to work out....only one way out....hit the global debt reset button......
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jalaroc
11:55 AM on 10/04/2011
I'm willing to bet medical issues and student loans are behind alot of the debt. As for home loans, alot of people are underwater because they took out loans, for whatever reason, during the housing bubble, on houses whose value was way overpriced and now the readjustment has hit them hard. I don't agree that a massive debt relief is the answer, and I owe a ton of student loans, until there are systemic changes. All you are doing is resetting the problem if you don't make the changes and someone is going to have to eat that money. As I see it, the driving problem is that once the government starts handing out money, the jackals start raising their prices and circling for their cut. Without a systemic overhaul, we will be throwing good money after bad.
11:33 AM on 10/04/2011
This is crap. Life is about decisions. I've worked hard and stayed out of debt. Only bought things I could afford. Gave up opportunities because they would have put me in debt. The guy who has been in his house since 1970, how does he still have a mortgage of 2800 a month. Did he refinance so he could get money for vacation or a big screen TV or some material thing. Then that was his choice and should have to live with that choice. I know there are some people that have just had bad luck and maybe we should help them but if you've put yourself in the position because of the choices you've made then get out of the problem yourself. I'm not paying for your bad decisions. Am I going to get any relief for making good choices. I don't think so and I don't think I should, so why should they. This is total crap.
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sanfran55
12:31 PM on 10/04/2011
True, life is about choices. But it sounds like you've been lucky that you haven't been struck by lyme's disease, or a liver transplant, or a severe form of cancer.

That will turn your hard work and savings upside down and most likely into foreclosure.
12:57 PM on 10/04/2011
I completely agree. As I said above, there are some people who have had circumstances that would warrant help and all of these listed I would agree would fall in that category. If I lost my job tomorrow, I would probably be in that same situation but if you bought more house than you could really afford because you thought the market was going to repay you in 3 years or you refinanced to get money back to pay for vacations and other things you couldn't really afford, why should I have to pay for their choices now. My house has depreciated like everyone else. I'm I going to get money back for that now even though I been current on my mortgage? I doubt it.
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drbob601
Soylent Green is People
04:32 AM on 10/04/2011
Sorry, but I can't support anything like this "Debt jubilee" proposal. The haircuts (losses) that would have to be taken by "bondholders" would cause big problems in the future. Who do you think these ever-present "bondholders" are? Lots of pension funds are holding these debts. And, frankly, I'd rather not take a cut in pay before I even start my retirement in 15 years.

This is just another attempt by the current generation to take money from future generations (and, ironically, from their own pensions) in order to instantly (and painlessly, for them) extricate themselves out of a hole that they dug themselves.

Fairness would dictate that everyone who was actually responsible for our current condition (and that includes borrowers) should be the ones making the sacrifices (and, yes, feeling the pain, too). Why deprive others of their hard-earned pension checks just so we can "have a jubillee" today? Is this the way we're going to operate from here on out? Borrow and spend for nine years at a time, then flush all the debts away every tenth year or so? Yeah, I'm sure we could find LOTS of folks to loan us money at low interest rates if that became our accepted "solution."
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TruelyFedUp
Ethics is nothing else than reverence for life.
07:05 PM on 10/04/2011
The point is the existing system is defunct, unfair and unworkable. What will happen to your pension if the entire economy collapses? Because you have invested in an unworkable system and you still have hope that you will get your piece of the pie, albeit earned by you, you are willing to let the rest of our society just gurgle down the drain. That's the exact key to the failure of this system - it is about "ME", just "ME" and only "ME". So we are ALL "responsible for our current condition".

If you could see and think beyond your own nose you would have created the solution of an American Jubilee PLUS giving everyone a home or land and the resources they need to be self sustaining. You are concerned about your survival and that is why you bought those bonds. But so is everyone else. Only by creating a stable and fed population will people be secure enough to think clearly and refuse to be bribed into recreating the same economic structure that is now failing us badly. YOU are still bribable. Give us a population that knows their homes are secure and their food supplies are guaranteed and that they have no massive debt to pay back to thieves and hoarders then you will see them create an economy and a government that's for and by the people. They will make sure that you are safe and cared for in your old age and that everybody else
11:18 PM on 10/03/2011
You and a neighbor both bought homes for 500K. He invested 200K of his own money in his, while you mortgaged the entire amount. Now your homes are worth only 350K, and you want the government to forgive you part of your debt so that you have a mortgage equal only to the value of your home? Isn't it only fair that you also petition the government to repay your neighbor for his 150K lost investment? When does it end?
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sanfran55
11:56 AM on 10/04/2011
Exactly - it's a mess!!!
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frank day
Obama cares about all of U.S.
01:18 PM on 10/04/2011
It is a mess.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TruelyFedUp
Ethics is nothing else than reverence for life.
07:17 PM on 10/04/2011
It ends when we cut the banks out of the equation. For centuries we have paid and paid and paid the banks for our homes. If it takes 30 years to pay it off the banks get TWO TIMES more than the value of the home in interest. Our government, had they kept the printing of money in their own hands, could have given us loans at 2% or 3% of non-compounding interest or enough to service the administration of the debt. That would have left in OUR hands the 200% of the value of the home instead of in the hands of bankers who have taken those profits and started wars of aggression in other countries in our names. Left in OUR hands we would have created businesses, industry, decent education for our truly free children and we would likely have been out populating other planets now instead of blasting other cultures with depleted uranium bombs so the wealthy could also steal and hoard their resources.
11:15 PM on 10/03/2011
This article simply recognizes the reality that the economy is stuck in a debt trap. The radical proposal of massive debt relief, or a jubilee is simply facing these facts.

Many of the comments to this article boil down to this: I worked hard and saved, why should some deadbeat moron have his debts forgiven in a jubilee? Good for if you have worked hard, been diligent and have a good life. However, if you are truly prudent, you can see that a collapse of the "too big to fail" banks is approaching, regardless of the bailouts. Instead of funding a new 21st century renaissance of new technology, clean energy, and space exploration, bankers are playing speculative games, funding wars, robbing from the poor. America needs an economy that helps people make a living not a killing.

The major players in the world of money have failed to provide prosperity. Their casino economy is not real wealth. The end game is approaching. A real jubilee is coming, whether they like it or not. Much debt will be repudiated, whether by default or a conscious jubilee. Its time for major monetary reform and jubilee. By that I mean just what it says in the Bible, Leviticus 25: Proclaim liberty from debt, return to inheritance. In our case, return to an industrial economy, financed with debt-free money, an economy producing real things.

Imagine an American Jubilee Celebration. www.spiritofjubilee.com/celebration/american-jubilee
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ErnestineBass
No longer a cog in The Machine.
12:08 AM on 10/04/2011
F&F&Badged!
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justanoldhippie
sarcasm, intended
01:20 AM on 10/04/2011
Thank you!
ReaItors Are Liars
NAR is corrupt
10:47 PM on 10/03/2011
"More foreclosures will hit home prices"

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/more-foreclosures-will-hit-home-prices-2011-09-16

Why buy a house today when you can buy later for 60% less?
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sanfran55
09:56 PM on 10/03/2011
There can be no economic recovery until the housing crisis is resolved - people can't sell their homes to relocate to another job. It's a mess.
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frank day
Obama cares about all of U.S.
10:40 PM on 10/03/2011
I agree with you on both points.
ReaItors Are Liars
NAR is corrupt
10:42 PM on 10/03/2011
Sure they can sell. Lower the price.
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sanfran55
11:09 PM on 10/03/2011
But what happens to the mortgage, when they are upside down? Foreclosure?