The
New York Timesbusiness section has an interesting article about the limited success of the "Making Home Affordable Program," which was intended to encourage (but not require!) banks to work with homeowners on facing foreclosure to lower their monthly payments. (The copy of the
Timesthat arrived on my doorstep gave this headline to the article: "In Trial Phase, Mortgage Bills Fall for 500,000." The online version of the article has the cheerier "Treasury Hails Milestone in Home Loan Modifications.")
The upshot: half a million families have gotten loan modifications, though they often faced "bureaucratic bungling, ceaseless frustration and confusion." This is only 40% of the 1.2 million eligible. And some companies have been better than others about modifying the mortgages. Wells Fargo and BoA have only modified 62,989 and 94,918, respectively, which is only 20% and 11% of those companies eligible mortgages, respectively. Bad BoA! Bad WF! (Has anyone heard anything good about these companies lately? Oh yeah, Ken Lewis resigned.) Still, "economists said the program was still not big enough to prevent many millions of Americans from losing their homes before the books are closed on the Great Recession." Check out the full article.
Meanwhile, Slate's blog The Big Money, is advising homeowners facing foreclosure to consider "strategic default," the fancy name for walking away from your mortgage (and your home). It's ok, they assure us. I'm having trouble disagreeing.
Go Ahead, Walk Away
There is nothing immoral about ditching your mortgage.
Read the rest of the post.