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Should You Walk Away From Your Underwater Mortgage?

Law professor sees 'moral double standard'





By Mark Huffman
ConsumerAffairs.com

November 5, 2009

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Millions of American homeowners are "underwater" on their mortgages -- owing more than the value of their homes. A University of Arizona law professor is rocking a few boats in the mortgage world by suggesting they would be better off walking away.

Brent White, whose article will be published in this month's issue of Arizona Legal Studies, says fear, guilt and shame are what keep many homeowners from making what he calls rational economic decisions.

"These emotional constraints are deliberately cultivated by the government and lenders who self-servingly tell borrowers that they have a moral and social obligation to pay their underwater mortgages," said White, an associate professor at UA's James E. Rogers College of Law. "Meanwhile, lenders ruthlessly seek to maximize profits or minimize losses irrespective of concerns of morality or social responsibility."

White calls this a double standard, one that has resulted in "distributional inequalities."

He argues that while irresponsible lenders have received government bailouts, responsible homeowners "who just happened to buy at the wrong time continue to bear a disproportionate burden of the housing collapse."

In his article, White cited figures finding that, in the second quarter of this year, more than 15 percent of homeowners had negative equity that was more than 20 percent of the value of their homes. Also, more than 22 percent had negative equity that amounted to at least 10 percent of the value of their homes.

Problem concentrated in a few states

This situation is exaggerated in a number of states, including California, Florida, Nevada and Arizona. Cities that have reached the 60 percent threshold, including Miami Beach, Fla.; Las Vegas, Nev.; Bakersfield, Calif.; and Phoenix, Mesa and Scottsdale. Numerous cities in California also make the list, including Fresno, Madera and Yuba City.

"The government, lenders, and credit-counseling agencies bombard homeowners with moral and fear-laden messages that overstate the consequences of foreclosure," said White. "Moreover, as a way of enforcing the double moral standard, lenders hold borrowers' credit scores as collateral and will trash it in retaliation for the borrower's exercise of their contractual option to default. Lenders don't want these houses and, with the government's help, do what they can to scare and shame borrowers into making what is in many cases a bad financial decision to stay in their home."

But White, whose article is already gaining attention across the nation, said he is not advocating that people walk away from their mortgages.

Instead, he is simply pointing out that there is a double standard: lenders are expected to minimize their economic loses regardless of moral concerns, while homeowners are expected to behave in "morally responsible" ways regardless of the economic costs.

No moral expectations for lenders

"To the contrary, walking away may be the most financially responsible choice if it allows one to meet one's unsecured credit obligations or provide for the future economic stability of one's family," he said.

White also suggested limiting the ability of lenders to report mortgage defaults to credit reporting agencies and, at a minimum, housing counseling agencies should give homeowners accurate information about both the advantages and disadvantages of letting go of their homes -- rather than simply telling them that foreclosure should be avoided at all cost.

"The current housing bust should be viewed for what it is: a failure to regulate -- not a moral failure on the part of American homeowners," White said. "That being the case, it is time to take morals out of the picture and search for an equitable solution to the negative equity problem."



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