Business Wire
Welcome
  • Log In
  • Sign Up
Search News:
Help
http://www.demos.org
June 25, 2008 12:59 PM Eastern Time 

A Year into the Mortgage Meltdown, New Report Analyzes Housing Market Crisis and Federal Response

June 25 National Press Club Event, Teleconference Announce Findings of Demos Report Praising the Dodd/Frank Plan but Calling for Additional Measures

WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Demos:

“For the long term, we need a set of rules for the mortgage and financial industry that give people confidence that this will never happen again.”

Time: 1PM EDT

Dial in number: (888) 491-8283
Conference ID: 53531509

With millions of American families facing foreclosure and the U.S. Senate moving toward approval of a compromise bill, the public policy center Demos takes stock of the housing market crisis and the federal response to date. The findings of a new Demos report-"Beyond the Mortgage Meltdown: Addressing the Current Crisis, Avoiding a Future Catastrophe"-were announced today at a National Press Club event in Washington, DC.

"The damage has been as bad as anyone imagined so far," writes Demos senior fellow James Lardner. "Foreclosures, after roughly doubling in the past year, are running at a rate of close to 25,000 a week. That's an alarming figure in itself, and it points toward the loss of more than 2 million homes in 2008 and 2009-a number very close to estimates made by consumer groups (and widely dismissed by lenders) in early 2007."

The study shows that, beyond the terrible consequences families face in this crisis, the housing market is in short- and long-term economic peril. The market, Lardner finds, could continue further on a downward spiral and pull much more of the economy down with it.

The Demos report praises the thrust of legislation approved by the House and moving toward passage in the Senate, which this Tuesday held a key procedural vote to limit debate on the bill. But it faults lawmakers for their failure, up to now, to support state and local efforts to "contain the damage of a terrible human and economic tragedy."

In addition to analyzing the current rescue legislation, which is co-sponsored by Senators Dodd and Shelby, and Representative Barney Frank, "Beyond the Mortgage Meltdown" outlines the history of this crisis, and a path forward to fix it. The study:

-Assesses the magnitude and continuing peril of the housing market crisis.

-Explores the hidden history of the housing market bubble.

-Documents the enabling role of federal agencies and officials in the subprime boom-and-bust.

-Makes the case for additional steps to contain the foreclosure epidemic and aid beleaguered states and localities.

-Calls for new rules and new oversight machinery for the mortgage market.

"Demos's report is timely, cogent, readable and persuasive," said Ellen Seidman, a Clinton administration alum who currently directs the Financial Services and Education Project at the New America Foundation. "The nation needs to face up to both the immediate and the structural changes that are needed to cushion the impact of the current crisis for homeowners, communities and the nation; to learn from the lessons of this crisis to improve our housing policy, especially by enhancing the supply of quality, well-located affordable rental housing; and to take the regulatory steps to prevent a similar wealth-stripping crisis from happening again," she said. "As the report states, the legislation pending in Congress is a needed first step, but it is only the beginning."

Moodys.com chief economist Mark Zandi, Demos president Miles Rapoport, and Federal Home Loan Bank of New York President Alfred DelliBovi, who was Deputy Secretary of Housing and Urban Development under George H.W. Bush, also provided comments on the report as panelists at the National Press Club event.

Under pressure from the White House, House and Senate leaders have reportedly backed off from a $4 billion plan to help states buy and rehabilitate foreclosed properties.

While there are some who claim that this would be an unfair bailout of irresponsible lenders and borrowers, the Demos report outlines how key federal officials and agencies took steps that actually helped unscrupulous lenders at the expense of responsible lenders and borrowers. The report suggests that this perceived "intervention" might be more accurately understood as an effort to "undo a small portion of the damage that government helped cause."

"Assisting homeowners and the mortgage market in the short run is only the first thing that needs to be done," said Miles Rapoport, President of Demos. "For the long term, we need a set of rules for the mortgage and financial industry that give people confidence that this will never happen again."

The report is available for download at www.demos.org

Note to journalists: to schedule an interview with James Lardner, Miles Rapoport or any of the panelists, please contact Tim Rusch, trusch@demos.org or (212) 389-1407.

Contacts

Demos
Tim Rusch, 212-389-1407
trusch@demos.org

http://www.demos.org

Company Information Center

Demos RSS feed for Demos

Share

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Delicious
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Digg
  • MySpace
  • Newsvine
  • Google Bookmark
  • Yahoo! Bookmark
  • EmailEmail
Tweet
  • EmailEmail
All News
Business Wire
  • Home
    • Home
    • Membership Benefits
    • Submit a Press Release
  • News
    • All News
    • News with Multimedia
    • News by Industry
    • News by Subject
    • News by Language
    • RSS Feeds
    • Business Wire Mobile
    • Features
    • Company NewsCenters
    • Smart Marketing Pages
    • Company Profiles
    • Annual Reports
  • Events
    • Trade Shows & Events
    • Earnings & Conference Calls
    • Business Wire Events
  • PR Services
    • Press Release Distribution
    • Distribution Lists
    • Industry Targeting
    • LatinoWire & Ethnic Media
    • Public Policy Wire
    • Trade Show Services
    • Photos & Multimedia Marketing
    • GloMoSoMe
    • Press Release Measurement
    • Mobile Alerts
    • Clips & Research
    • Fax & Email Services
    • Online Newsrooms
    • News Feeds
  • IR Services
    • Material News Disclosure
    • XBRL
    • EDGAR (US)
    • IPO Services
    • SEDAR (Canada)
    • European Disclosure
    • Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
    • Investor Targeting
    • Fax & Email Services
    • Online Investor Centers
    • IR Resource Center
  • SEO Services
    • Press Release Optimization
    • EON: Enhanced Online News
    • Webinars & Resources
  • Journalist Tools
    • PressPass: Your News
    • Conduct Surveys
    • Business Wire News Feeds
    • Business Wire News On Your Website
    • Journalism Associations
  • Support & Education
    • FAQ
    • How to Write a Press Release
    • How To Optimize a Press Release for Search
    • How to Distribute a Press Release
    • Find Your News Online
    • Sample Press Release
    • Features News Tips
    • International Media Tips
    • SEC Regulations
    • Exchange Guidelines
    • White Papers
    • Webinars & Podcasts
    • Get WiredIn!
  • About Us
    • Business Wire Newsroom
    • Contact Us
    • History
    • Jobs
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Site Map
  • Privacy Statement
  • Terms of Use
  • ©2012 Business Wire

More Business Wire sites

  • Canada
  • UK/Ireland
  • Deutschland
  • France
  • Italy
  • Japan
  • EON: Enhanced Online News
  • Tradeshownews.com
  • PYMNTS.com

About Us

  • Business Wire Newsroom
  • Contact Us
  • Business Wired blog

News on BusinessWire.com

  • All News
  • RSS Feeds
  • Business Wire Mobile Apps

Follow Us on Twitter

  • @BusinessWire
  • @BWSportsWire
  • @BWPolitics
  • @BWCSRNews
  • @EONpr
  • @TradeshowNews
  • @BW_Canada
  • @BWIntlMedia
  • @BWInfoDiva
  • @BusinessWireFR

Like Us on Facebook

  • Business Wire
  • Tradeshow News