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You are here: Home / Reforming “bankruptcy reform” for housing-bubble victims

Reforming “bankruptcy reform” for housing-bubble victims

August 6, 2007 By Mark Kleiman @markarkleiman

Most of the damage that’s going to be done by the bursting of the real estate bubble can’t, now, be prevented. Lots of people are going to take a financial beating. Some are going to lose their homes. (And, on the other hand, housing prices in hot markets are going to come down from the stratosphere, which means that some people who couldn’t afford a house at the old, insane prices will now be able to afford one.)

But some of the damage still avoidable. In particular, some people who lose their homes are going to find themselves still stuck with some of the debt, and thanks to “bankruptcy reform” it will be difficult and expensive for everyone, and impossible for many, to discharge that debt through bankruptcy.

It shouldn’t be hard to craft legislative language to fix that problem (without giving relief to the people who have been using refinancing and lines of credit to, in effect, spend the housing equity they didn’t earn on SUV’s and other toys).

From the viewpoint of Democrats, and especially Democratic Presidential candidates, this is just about the perfect issue. It will help lots of people, and not just those who actually go bankrupt. Changing the bankruptcy rules would give all eligible debtors better bargaining position with their creditors. Even those whose own homes aren’t at risk are likely to side with the homeowners against the lenders on this one. And of course Republicans will reflexively oppose it.

The one downside: Democrats as well as Republicans feed at the trough of the financial-services industry. (I’m looking at you, Max. And you, Joe. And you, Chuck.) But money isn’t our problem this year; it’s time to start working for the voters instead of the donors. My guess is that the leadership will see it that way.

Update Apparently the securitization process is both making it harder for homeowners in over their heads to renegotiate their mortgages and making it difficult or impossible for those who were cheated to get recourse through the courts. (What would sleazy companies do without the good old “holder-in-due-course” doctrine?) This strengthens the case for extending bankruptcy protection to the victims, but it also suggests legislative changes to make sure that the CMO buyers have to buy whatever fraud liability goes with the deal.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: House-price bubble

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