Rights Groups Skeptical About Phase-Out Plans for Fannie, Freddie

The Obama administration released a plan on Friday for restructuring the housing finance market. The strategy lays out three options (the better to avoid Republicans immediately ripping it apart) for winding down the government-sponsored Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and transitioning, over at least five years, to a more privatized mortgage market. Suggested Reading The…

The Obama administration released a plan on Friday for restructuring the housing finance market. The strategy lays out three options (the better to avoid Republicans immediately ripping it apart) for winding down the government-sponsored Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and transitioning, over at least five years, to a more privatized mortgage market.

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The White House plan comes after long-held complaints about the mortgage companies' activities, which cost taxpayers $134 billion in bailouts after the 2008 financial meltdown. Congress will ultimately make the decision for how to proceed.

The three proposed scenarios are 1) end the governmentโ€™s role in most mortgages; 2) a government role that guarantees mortgage investments created by private companies; 3) have the government support the mortgage market only when itโ€™s in trouble.

The plan also provides increased consumer protections and transparency for investors, aimed at preventing borrowers from taking on loans they canโ€™t afford and stopping financial companies from taking extreme risks. Finally, it offers support for lower income Americans with reputable credit and a desire to become homeowners, by strengthening the Federal Housing Administration.

A coalition of organizations (including the National Urban League, NAACP, National Council of La Raza and Center for Responsible Lending) quickly weighed in on the proposal from a civil rights perspective. They werenโ€™t thrilled.

They noted that African Americans and Latinos are far more likely to receive higher-priced loans, even when their credit warrants a prime loan. Blaming these disparate practices on the secondary, private housing market, they rejected White House pitches for the marketโ€™s complete or near-complete privatization.

โ€œThe third option, offering catastrophic reinsurance, inspires more confidence than the first two, but lacks important details as to how it would serve all Americans well,โ€ the groups said in a joint statement. โ€œFull privatization would leave most Americans at the mercy of Wall Street, and we know from experience the devastating results that would bring.

โ€œFair lending rules that protect against discrimination and deceptive practices should be at the core of reshaping the housing finance market. True reform must eliminate the dual-track structure that traps qualified families in a fringe credit market, and must build a more secure and accountable secondary market, preventing future crises like the one that helped bring our economy to its knees.โ€

Straight From The Root

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