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Sound
Money
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
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Statement
Before the Joint Economic Committee, November 8, 2007
Mr. Chairman,
our economy finds itself in a precarious state. Oil prices are rising,
gold is nearing all-time highs, and the dollar is nearing all-time
lows. The root of this crisis, as with past financial and economic
crises, results from federal government intervention into the economy,
not to anything endemic to the market, nor to the actions of market
participants.
The collapse
of the housing market has served as a catalyst for the economy's
latest bust. For years the federal government has made it one of
its prime aims to encourage homeownership among people who otherwise
would not be able to afford homes. Various federal mortgage programs
through the FHA, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac have distorted the
normal workings of the housing market.
The implicit
government backing of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac provides investors
an incentive to provide funds to Fannie and Freddie that otherwise
would have been put to use in other sectors of the economy. It was
this flood of investor capital that helped to fuel the housing bubble.
Legislation
such as the Zero Downpayment Act and the misnamed American Dream
Downpayment Act made it possible for people who could not afford
down payments on houses to receive assistance from the federal government,
or even to pay no down payment at all, courtesy of the taxpayers.
The requirement of a down payment has always helped to ascertain
the ability of a buyer to pay off a mortgage. It requires the buyer
to show hard work and thrift, the ability to delay present consumption
in order to make a larger acquisition in the future.
When this requirement
is minimized or eliminated, you introduce a new class of homebuyers,
people who are unable to budget and save for the purchase of a home,
or who should wait for a few years until they have saved enough
to purchase a home. Federal policies have encouraged investors,
lenders, and brokers to cater to these people, so it is no surprise
that market actors came up with ever more sophisticated means of
bringing these people into the real estate market.
Finally,
the Federal Reserve's loose monetary policy and lowering of interest
rates were a major spur to the housing boom. Low interest rates
influence marginal buyers, those who are sitting on the fence, and
encourage them to take on a mortgage that they otherwise would not.
Even when interest rates are raised, no one expects them to stay
high for long, as there is always pressure from politicians and
investors to keep rates low, as no one wants the cheap credit to
end.
Thinking that
interest rates will cycle from low to higher, back to low, lenders
begin to offer adjustable rate mortgages, 2/28's, 3/27's, and other
sophisticated mortgages that may trap many unsavvy buyers. Buyers
go short, lenders go long, and many people have been burned as a
result.
It is time
that the federal government get out of the housing business. Through
our interventionist legislation we have caused the boom and bust,
and any attempts at reform that fail to address the causes of our
current problem will only sow the seeds for the next bubble.
See
the Ron Paul File
November
14, 2007
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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