A Really Bad Plan for Reviving the Housing Market

For breathtakingly stupid political ideas and catastrophic “solutions” to America’s biggest problems, it’s hard to beat the New York Times op-ed page.  There, joined by such jihadists of the Left as Frank Rich and Maureen Dowd, resides the peerlessly wrong-headed economist Paul Krugman, whose Nobel Prize was as well-deserved as the one Yasser Arafat received for helping to bring Peace to the world. Until yesterday, we might have thought Krugman had cornered the market for the absolute worst ideas on how to revive the economy. Here’s a guy who actually seems to believe, in his heart of hearts, that the reason this has not yet occurred is that the central banks of Europe, the U.S. and Japan have not thrown enough money at the problem. We stopped counting stimulus dollars and guarantees ourselves when the total hit $15 trillion a couple of years ago. That was long after we’d become convinced that deficit spending in such cosmic quantities, far from reviving the economy, would ultimately bury the U.S. in debt. As it has.  Such concerns pose no problem for Krugman, however, since he simply avoids using the word “debt” in his Martian-friendly economic essays.

There are so many world-class crackpots in Krugman’s chosen field that it was all but inevitable a colleague would surface to challenge him for the top spot in the Dismal Science Hall of Shame. Enter one James A. Wilcox,  author of an op-ed piece on Wednesday that purported to offer  “A Way to Make People Buy Homes Again”.  Wilcox, a professor at Berkeley, of all places, says all that’s needed to jump-start the residential real estate market is government mortgage insurance. Specifically, he suggests a one-time premium equal to one percent on the home’s purchase price, or $2000 for a house selling for $200,000.  At the end of three years, says Wilcox, “the government would automatically mail checks to protected homeowners if average house prices in their area were lower than when they purchased their homes.” He’s right about one thing: this would stimulate demand from would-be buyers who have been sitting on the fence waiting for prices to fall even further. Sounds like a good idea, right?  In fact, it is a recipe for disaster. To understand why, let’s consider the main features of Wilcox’s proposal:

  • He says mortgage lenders might loosen up if “the government” (aka taxpayers) were to backstop prices. Do we really need easier credit for home buyers?  Have we learned nothing from the disaster this caused in the first place? In fact, the 20% downpayment lenders are now demanding is about as loose as mortgages should ever have been. In effect, Wilcox is suggesting that we stimulate the housing market by amping up a veritable new army of poorly qualified buyers.
  • Evidently unable to chew gum and breathe at the same time, argumentatively speaking, he talks about stimulating housing demand without even considering supply.  Does anyone doubt that there are millions of sellers out there, including banks holding toxic quantities of foreclosed loans, waiting for some bids to surface so that they can finally whack-the-mole and clear out of Dodge?
  • It should also be clear (to anyone but a university-trained economist, that is) that the moment “the government” guarantees that buyers cannot lose no matter how much they pay for homes, neither buyer nor seller will much care about the home’s true market value.
  • Wilcox says that stimulating home purchases would have a ripple effect on the economy. Only an egghead could fail to see that the ripple — all of it consumption rather than investment — would be financed by huge new quantities of borrowing collateralized by a wasting asset that produces nothing.
  • With a straight face, and apparently using Obamacare math, Wilcox informs us that if two million participants were to take advantage of his hare-brained scheme, “the expected net cost to taxpayers would be a few billion dollars annually.” We won’t even comment on that one, since we can hear you laughing already.

Unfortunately, the Times’ benighted readers, conditioned by the likes of Krugman to think like left-leaning politicians, would see nothing funny in Wilcox’s nutty idea. But there is no denying its populist appeal. Lord help us if mortgage insurance ever comes up for a vote on Capitol Hill.

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  • Rich January 28, 2012, 9:33 pm

    Interesting Financial History from former head of Forbes Asian Desk and second wealthiest family in Canada:

    http://bit.ly/xflBjm

    • DK January 30, 2012, 12:34 am

      Excellent post, Rich. Thank you!

  • DK January 27, 2012, 12:59 am

    Loved the closing Rick, you nailed it. Still laughing as I type.
    All in the wake of a worsening situation in the Middle East with Iran trading oil for gold (India) and shunning dollars.
    Another fitting picture/painting for your article might be Pieter Bruegel’s “The Blind Leading the Blind.”

    • Raven February 11, 2012, 3:30 am

      —Your buiteaful image was SEEN IN/Sua imagem maravilhosa foi visto dentro:Thank you for sharing / obrigado compartilhando!______________________________________

  • fallingman January 26, 2012, 10:42 pm

    Precisely.

    Good to have you back Red.

    • Rich January 27, 2012, 5:40 am

      Yes…

    • redwilldanaher January 27, 2012, 7:45 pm

      Thanks my friends. I hope everyone here has been well.

  • redwilldanaher January 26, 2012, 7:59 pm

    As always a great piece/read Rick. Although I would evaluate things a little differently. The NYT lunatics et al. seem insane but then that conclusion rests upon a foundation that believes that the intentions of their plans are actually to improve things in the economy. IMO that’s not the case. IMO all of their suggestions are intended to sound great when heard by the intentionally economically illiterate masses. From there all paths that flow forth from these “insane” suggestions eventually lead to greater governmental control over the lives of the American Serf. In the end that’s where these godforsaken totalitarianists want to take us.

    • Mario cavolo January 27, 2012, 4:49 pm

      Too easy to agree how self-serving the system has become…”…of the people, by the people, for the people…” sadly far away.

  • Rich January 26, 2012, 6:55 pm
    • DK January 27, 2012, 2:18 am

      I have some differences of opinion with RP but overall I think he’s been the best choice for years. With that said, I love Jimmy Cliff.
      On a side note, I’m usually annoyed by people (kids) driving around with their windows down, blasting music, but this past Summer many of the tunes I heard were the above, Bob Marley (“Get up, Stand up” and “Redemption Song”) as well as a lot of Rage Against the Machine.
      I’m not sure if anyone here has an appreciation for hip hop/rap but I enjoy Mos Def, particularly “Mathematics” (circa 1999)

    • Rich January 27, 2012, 5:33 am

      Thx DK for Mos Def Mathematics brilliance…

  • Robert January 26, 2012, 6:30 pm

    No comment about Krugman or Wilcox….

    I don’t berate these economists for their positions- I berate the BASIS for their positions.

    When you spend your entire life (or even a sizable portion of it) wandering the halls of Academia, you quite thoroughly and completely forget the difference between credit and capital. Universities are capital- rich environments. There is cutting edge equipment, intellectual brilliance, and a never ending inventory of free sound boards and logical challenges to every idea.

    But little of it is earned.. most of it is granted (and a grant is nothing but a gift or an extension of credit)

    ergo- in the typical Academic’s mind, capital comes from the extension of credit…

    What is missing, is Jihad (to use the Muslim term) or Trabajo (to use the probably far less inflammatory Spanish term)

    In the truest sense, Jihad and Trabajo mean the same thing – they imply the expenditure of effort in order to do what MUST be done. This effort can apply to real work (like digging a ditch that HAS to be dug in order to route flood waters away from your domicile); or the effort can apply to a struggle, or the endurance of discomfort (for many Mexican men, spending an entire evening in the prescence of their mother in law in order to keep their wife happy, it is a textbook example of REAL trabajo)

    When Trabajo (effort) is expended in the pursuit of livelihood, the english term for the outcome is Enterprise.

    In University settings, there is no real enterprise- nothing HAS to be done. Incentive is born exclusively out of the competitive desire to out-Professor your colleagues, or to secure ever greater grants from governments and corporations. Grants which typically originate, quite coincidentally, directly from Ben Bernanke’s printing press.

    Schools produce NOTHING that maintains permanent (net) capital value. Now, bear with me before you all go hog-wild in attacking this statement…

    True, they produce graduates, many of whom go into the real world and begin producing (converting real capital into true value and generating profits along the way); but the unfortunate side effect to this is that they also produce a ton of graduates who never leave. Just like the dead-wood thirty somethings still living in mom and dad’s basement in Dearborn, these “graduates” will spend the rest of their lives wandering the halls, seeking the incentive to out-compete their professorial colleagues, or maybe to secure a grant from Uncle Sugar or one of the big Pharma companies…

    They will never know (or understand) the pride of personal accomplishment that goes along with paving your own path, and then walking it…. They will always and forever only know the pride that comes from walking a path that is already clearly laid out, paved, and marked with bright yellow arrows that leads them nowhere but to their inevitable deathbed.

    This is why the world so completely understands the fundamental difference between the societal impact resulting from the death of Steve Jobs, versus the impact resulting from the death of John Maynard Keynes…

    Steve Jobs paved roads – he created ENTERPRISE. Keynes wrote about how much happier everyone would be if they would simply ignore unpaved areas and simply choose to walk the path already laid out for them.

    But, even in the academic world, there are stand-out examples of people who understood what it meant to employ their intellectual capital in the pursuit of real enterprise- Example: Steven Hawking- a person has no use of any of his appendages, and yet has PRODUCED substance of real (and permanent) value to society (I am referring to the LHC, which would not exist without Hawking’s ability to abstractively deconstruct literally everything that has ever existed in this Universe using nothing but the basic biological tool permanently locked inside his skull)

    Krugman, and others of his ilk, know nothing of Trabajo, nor anything of Enterprise. They are seemingly lost as they travel along a clearly marked road…

    Queue Robert Frost’s famous quote:

    “Two roads diverged in a wood and I – I took the one less traveled by, and that has made all the difference…”

    &&&&&

    Great post! Thanks for weighing in on the topic du jour, Robert. RA

    • Rich January 26, 2012, 6:54 pm

      Nice Robert…

    • mava January 27, 2012, 4:41 am

      Robert,

      The task of krugman and all of the other slimaballs on government payroll, the goal for which they get paid, is to lay down a complicated theory below the direction in which the government wants to travel, to serve as a base few could dispute.

      It is not to teach economics nor to predict economic developments, none of that.

      Like most whores, this isn’t really what krugman would want to do, if he had any choice, but this is what he chooses to do to get paid above of what his skills would otherwise command in a free market.

    • Robert January 27, 2012, 7:43 pm

      “this isn’t really what krugman would want to do, if he had any choice, but this is what he chooses to do to get paid above of what his skills would otherwise command in a free market.”

      I could not agree more…. brilliant summation Mava.

  • Larry D January 26, 2012, 6:09 pm

    Choose the letter that does not belong in the following group:

    a) astrologer
    b) economist
    c) shaman
    d) alchemist
    e) none of the above

    • Robert January 26, 2012, 6:31 pm

      You forgot “witch-doctor”

      🙂

  • ken horn January 26, 2012, 5:00 pm

    Come on Rick, this story can’t be true. The next thing you’ll tell me is that President Obama was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize after 12 days in office. I may be naive, but let’s get real.

  • Rich January 26, 2012, 4:46 pm

    Well-parsed prose Rick.

    Clearly these academic neoKeynesian Totalitarian economists without a horse in the race, never read or understood Hayak’s Road to Serfdom, which Reader’s Digest actually abridged and published in 1945:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Road_to_Serfdom

    Found most academic economists, including the one at my small liberal arts college who became President and advised Sukarno in Indonesia, put Austrian literature on their syllabi to cover Academic posteriors, but did not cover them in class.

    Loved the Hitler Flying Bell photo, perhaps with a meta message?

    A lovely pink chemtrail sunset swim at the local hot springs under Venus and the Crescent Moon with Mars high in the heaven, followed by the Mall, Trader Joe’s and a Restaurant, found all nearly empty, with more employees than customers.

    This cannot last long, so although Point and Figure trends target 1930 for gold, $1580 for SPX and 4.9% for the 30-year T Bond, a nasty correction commencing today would not surprise.

    We are sitting precisely at the four-year SPX downtrend from October 2007…

    • cam fitzgerald January 26, 2012, 6:00 pm

      No nasty correction for awhile by my reckoning. We finally have a confirmed dollar reversal against the euro. Metals took off like a rocket of course on that news. So too, rising equities this morning. We are in overbought territory but it remains to be seen how a weakening dollar will now play out. Gold and silver are back in play again. I am a buyer, gold stocks will finally shine a little.

    • Robert January 26, 2012, 6:34 pm

      My position in AGQ that I took on in November sure had a bumpy ride to today… glad I stuck with it.

      hey- How does that go- better to be early and right, than right on time and wrong?

    • Cam Fitzgerald January 26, 2012, 7:12 pm

      That is a good expression Robert. I only wish I was a better market timer. Happy enough that I seem to have got this one right (only about a month late) but you can still end up losing and having a rough ride while you are waiting. Not to mention that almost everyone calls you crazy the whole time because all the metrics tell them your idea is hare brained or half baked. Oh well.

      The puzzle for me is money is shifting to Treasuries as doubts about the risk of a Greek default have returned. An overbought market with a declining dollar makes it even more interesting as commodities defy gravity and gold shoots up.

      Always enough going on dynamically to keep everyone on their toes though. Why else would we be here! It is all about the ride, not the destination.

    • Robert January 26, 2012, 10:48 pm

      “Not to mention that almost everyone calls you crazy the whole time because all the metrics tell them your idea is hare brained or half baked. Oh well.”

      Hahaha too true.

      You’ll notice I never argued or refuted DO’s claims that I was a cement-head. He may yet be proven right, and my head might actually crack after a hard frost.

      Some things can (and must) only prove (or disprove) themselves via the passage of time…. like the distinction between knowledge and wisdom 🙂

    • Steve January 27, 2012, 8:22 am

      Yes Robert, fraud money>given time will produce what?

  • Mario cavolo January 26, 2012, 4:20 pm

    Actually life insurance companies already have such a structured product with a lot of financial benefits, as I’m researching now and was an agent 20plus years ago. Fees are quite high but otherwise quit good. Its called indexed universal life… The accumulating cash value which is invested in the markets is guaranteed at a zero gain even if the market loses that year: the trade off is a cap at around 12-14% even if the market might be up more than that percent in a given year…. The reasonable sales pitch is that preventing losses is a much bigger part of longterm portfolio gains than most people realize…. Again, the down side is high commissions and fees, read the fine print and find a good broker who knows these products…these are definitely long term products with quite a few other planning advantages ….

    Cheers, Mario

  • Brian January 26, 2012, 3:24 pm

    Hey, can this scheme also be applied to me buying a new car, a new boat, a new computer, a new…………….

    Why stop at housing. A good idea should be exploited to the max!

  • John Jay January 26, 2012, 2:48 pm

    Expect more of such insanity in the future. With the Fed proclaiming ZIRP for four more years, they are admitting that there is no real economy left to be revived. JC Penney is slashing all prices 40% in an attempt to stay alive. Retired boomers will eat into their savings more and more because 1% on even one million dollars is a whole $10,000. So the bite of food and energy inflation ( not counted by the Fed) will suck up more and more of discretionary income. As far as housing goes, FHA 3% or less down mortgages are an ever increasing share of that market, going from 4% in 2006 to 40% in 2010 for intital mortgages. The entire economy is on the dole. By the end of 2014 the Fed may be holding 100% of US Treasury paper, all of it paying no interest. To infinity and beyond!

  • Mark Uzick January 26, 2012, 12:14 pm

    Either the old gray lady has senile dementia or she’s trying to give Alfred E. Neuman a run for his money.

  • Benjamin January 26, 2012, 10:35 am

    I would say that there’s enough holes in this idea to turn it into swiss cheese but… there isn’t any swiss cheese. There’s just one big hole.

  • Mark Uzick January 26, 2012, 7:44 am

    Why limit this to housing; aren’t stocks and commodities important to the economy too?

    For 1% the federal government can backstop, not only mortgage loans, but margin loans too! with the added bonus that, unlike houses, at least they’re not wasting assets. We’re all going to be rich!