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THE
SCHOOL OF HARD WORK OR
HABITUATED HAND-OUTS?
by Brady Willett
FallStreet.com
September 4, 2007
After signing the
‘American Dream Downpayment Act of 2003’ Bush
added, “We want people to be fully aware of what it means to buy a
home and what it takes”. The contradiction, if otherwise unclear, was
that the President was signing a law that gave free money to those who
could not afford to buy a home, and then he planned to educate
them about the hard work, savings, and planning that is required to buy
a home.
With Wall Street packaging
and selling mortgage reset time bombs, rating agencies dolling out A’s
first and asking questions never, and many homeowners essentially
signing future default notices before their new home purchases were
finalized, Bush’s efforts at expanding homeownership since 2003 have
gone unnoticed as the subprime debacle widens. Unfortunately, so have
the costs of funding Bush’s homeownership initiatives. What
should not remain unnoticed is the irony of it all: near the height of
the housing boom Bush wanted to do everything he could to boost already
record high homeownership rates, but now, as the boom turns to bust,
Bush is eying a plethora of emergency policy moves to simply try and
keep ownership rates stable. You can not help but wonder whether
or not many Americans would have been better off if Bush simply left the
mortgage market alone.
Some are wondering exactly
that. Notably, United States congressman Ron Paul, who was one of the
few who stood up to tackle what was then largely hailed as a good new
law:
“The
American dream, as conceived by the nation's founders, has little in
common with H.R. 1276, the so-called American Dream Downpayment Act. In
the original version of the American dream, individuals earned the money
to purchase a house through their own efforts, oftentimes sacrificing
other goods to save for their first downpayment. According to the
sponsors of H.R. 1276, that old American dream has been replaced by a
new dream of having the federal government force your fellow citizens to
hand you the money for a downpayment.”
PDF
File
Whether talking about
‘what it takes’ to buy a home or keep inflation under control, Ron
Paul is required reading for free market thinkers. But alas, this is
reading that nearly all U.S. policy makers - perhaps more concerned with
buying votes or borrowing/spending now at the expense of future
generations – neither read nor deploy.
“The
temptation to print and spend money with impunity, like the temptation
to max out lines of credit, is too strong for government to resist.”
High
Risk Credit - Aug 20, 07
As Bernanke, Bush, and
others despondently stumble through their bailout handbooks in search of
the recipe needed to avert disaster, what should be asked is
whether the latest ‘crisis’ in subprime is the problem or the
repetitive bailout policies themselves. The real lesson may not be that
U.S. citizens are too naïve and gullible to live in an ownership
society, or that Wall Street can not be trusted to mediate a vibrant
marketplace, but that policy makers, due to their inherent loathing of
free market principles, are forever mixing together costly recovery and
bailout packages under the guise of keeping the financial soufflé from
caving in.
Unfortunately, with Mr.
Paul unlikely to become the next President of the United States, and a
groundswell of voices begging the Fed to cut interest rates rather than
permanently close its doors (and windows), no authority maker is likely
to try and placate a society and financial system that is medicated on
instant gratification. Instead Big Brother will continue to let
the children play, fight, and throw tantrums, all the while looking down
with a false sense of responsibility emblazoned on their borrowed
Chinese made shirts.
For the record, and
although he is not being blamed for today’s crisis, Bush’s policies
of increasing U.S. homeownership rates failed; not because a few people
who otherwise could not afford to got a new home, but because he added
to the hazardous social shortcoming that says what comes after recess is
a free lunch.


© 2007 Brady Willett
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