In 1997, Norway instituted Debt Forgiveness
and “Wrote Down” 90% of the Countries Mortgage Debt. It’s been done, documented, and completely
hidden from the World, through the World Media, until 19 April 2012.
Complete and Total Censorship of anything
Debt Forgiveness Related, World Wide.
IMF SAYS TARGETED DEBT REDUCTION POLICIES
CAN WORK
The IMF has said that targeted household
debt reduction policies can deliver significant economic benefits.
Latest IMF report notes link between high
levels of household debt and the effect on economic recovery
The IMF has said
that targeted household debt reduction policies – including mortgage write-downs
– can deliver significant economic benefits.
The International Monetary Fund made the
comments in its latest World Economic Outlook.
The IMF said such policies can
substantially mitigate the negative effect of household deleveraging on
economic activity.
The report noted the well established link
between high levels of household debt run up during a housing boom, and the
effect of a high debt overhang on economic recovery.
It found that countries, like Ireland, that
saw house prices and household borrowing skyrocket, saw a longer than average
period of recession after the bursting of the housing bubble.
A large part of this protracted recession
it said is due to households trying to reduce their debt levels, which in turn
leads to less spending in the economy, driving the recession deeper and
further.
“Because debt is acting as a brake on
economic growth, it is important to unstick the brake” said the report’s author
Daniel Leigh.
The IMF has studied the response of a
number of countries to situations where large parts of the population are
burdened with high mortgage debt in a recession, and finds that such programmes
can help prevent self-reinforcing cycles of falling house prices and lower
aggregate demand.
“Such policies are particularly relevant
for economies with limited scope for expansionary macroeconomic policies and in
which the financial sector has already received government report”, notes the
conclusions. Ireland meets both these criteria.
The report highlighted what it
calls the “bold ” household debt reduction programmes implemented in the US in
the 1930′s and in
Iceland in this crisis, which it said can
“significantly reduce the number of household defaults and foreclosures and
substantially reduce debt repayment burdens”.
It contrasted these examples with others
that have not been successful, such as the current response to the crisis in
the US and Hungary, and the policies pursued in Colombia and the Scandinavian
countries in the 90′s.
As well as the “bold” approach, it said
that ensuring a strong banking sector is crucial during the period of household
deleveraging. It stated that the policies in Colombia and Hungary were not a
success as they placed too much burden on an already fragile banking sector.
It also said the policies must be designed
to have incentives for both banks and borrowers to participate, notably by
offering a viable alternative to default and foreclosure.
The IMF noted that government support for
household debt restructuring programmes involves clear winners and losers. “The
friction caused by such redistribution may be one reason why such policies have
rarely been used in the past, except when the magnitude of the problem was
substantial and the ensuing social and political pressures considerable”,’ it
stated.
It cited another study which found that
political systems tend to become more polarised in the wake of financial
crises, and raised the question of collective action problems – that distressed
mortgage borrowers may be less politically organised than banks – and this can
hamper efforts to implement household debt restructuring.
In the US in the
1930′s the Roosevelt administration introduced the Home Owners Loan
Corporation, which bought distressed mortgages from banks with government
bonds, with federal guarantees on principal and interest. It then restructured
these mortgages to make them more affordable to borrowers.
80% of the restructured loans (some
800,000) were protected from repossession by the measure, and the mortgages
were subsequently sold on over time for a nominal profit at the time the
programme was brought to an end in 1951. The mortgage purchases amounted to
8.4% of 1933′s GDP in the US.
The IMF said “a key feature of the HOLC was
the effective transfer of funds to credit constrained households with distressed
balance sheets and a high marginal propensity to consume, which mitigated the
negative effects on aggregate demand” caused by the recession and need for
household deleveraging.
The main mechanism to make loans more
affordable was to extend the term of the mortgage – sometimes doubling the term
– and converting it from a variable to a fixed rate. In a number of cases the
HOLC also wrote off part of the principal to ensure that no loans exceeded 80%
of the appraised value of the house.
In the case of Iceland the situation was
more difficult, due in part to the much bigger proportion of the population
that was affected, and to the wide presence of foreign currency mortgages.
The government and the newly constructed
Icelandic banks developed a template to be used in case by case restructuring
discussions between borrowers and lenders. The templates facilitated
substantial debt write-downs designed to align secured debt with the supporting
collateral (i.e bring the loan into line with the value of the house) and align
debt service with the ability to repay.
The IMF found that such case by case
negotiations safeguard property rights and reduce moral hazard, but they take
time. As of January of this year, only 35% of the case by case restructuring
applications had been processed. To speed things up, Iceland has introduced a
debt forgiveness plan which writes down deeply underwater mortgages to 110% of
the households’ pledgeable assets.
It noted that only when a comprehensive
framework was put in place and a clear expiration date for relief measures
announced that debt write-downs finally took off. As of January 2012, 15 to 20%
of all Icelandic mortgages have been or are in the process of being written
down.
However, it said the jury is still out on
Iceland’s plans, and said the extent to which Iceland can put its citizens back
on their feet and minimise moral hazard remains to be seen.
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