0
0

How does one regulate "well" ?


 invite response                
2006 Sep 21, 8:44am   19,831 views  195 comments

by HARM   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

over-regulation

We've had numerous debates on this blog over the past year on what constitutes "appropriate" levels of government, uh, "involvement" in the RE market. Individual views run a wide gamut, but can be roughly categorized and described thusly:

1. Extreme (capital "L") Libertarianism/market-fundamentalism: basically hands-off/no government regulation of or involvement in capital/credit markets whatsoever. Critics have derided this as "cowboy"/robber-baron capitalism and point out that NO regulation of any kind is basically impossible, and leads to all sorts of socially (and economically) undesirable outcomes. Such as: formation of monopolies/cartels that engage in anti-competitive price-fixing (think OPEC/NAR), abusive labor practices (think child labor before the 1930s) and unrestrained/excessive pollution (think "Tragedy of the Commons" and pre-1970 air/water quality).

  • Practical example as it applies to housing:
    As a sub-prime lender, you loaned the money to Mr. F@cked Borrower, disclosing the minimum information required by law in the RESPA statements and fine print (where all the critical loan details were buried). If he didn't want to bother to take the time to read/question the paperwork or have a competent RE attorney review them on his behalf, then tough titties! You made out like a bandit and sold the loan (and risk) upstream to some sucker pension/hedge fund as a MBS. Too bad/so sad the MBS holders actually believed that "implicit taxpayer guarantee" when they bought your loan at an extremely low risk premium --caveat emptor!!
  • 2. Limited government/minarchist (small "l") libertarianism: advocates the minimum level of government involvement necessary to limit socially undesirable outcomes resulting from completely unfettered capitalism (aka "externalities"/Tragedy of the Commons). Emphasizes practical, pragmatic, well considered forms of regulation that does not attempt to artificially fix the price of labor/commodities, engage in arbitrary subsidies favoring one asset class over another, and generally avoids what can be termed "social engineering" regulation. Favors developing solutions to socially undesirable "externalities" that the market itself appears incapable of solving with the least amount of government involvement/cost possible. Attempts to regulate in an "asset class neutral" manner (not to pick market "winners" and "losers"). A strong emphasis is placed on aligning risk and reward without dictating what specific levels of risk/reward are appropriate for the consumer/lender.

  • Practical example as it applies to housing:
    As a sub-prime lender, you loaned the money Mr. F@cked Borrower and took your (way above standard) fees and profits knowing that the borrower could not possibly repay the mortgage. You also buried all the critical details in the fine print, while glossing over/minimizing all this during your hard-ball sales pitch favoring the NAAVLP. Then you packaged the loan and (mis)represented it to investors as a supposedly "safe" MBS with a very low risk premium, all the while implying that the taxpayer was on the hook if it went bad. Tell me why YOU shouldn't eat the loan vs. the U.S. taxpayer? Oh, and by the way, where's Alan Greenspan, Franklin Raines and David Lereah hiding out these days? We're overdue for another "perp walk".
  • 3. DS-style "Fabian socialism": government heavily regulates capital/credit markets and the means of production/distribution, and may even directly control/fix the prices of labor and commodities directly. Government itself may even be a producer and large-scale consumer of housing stock ("projects"/publicly subsidized housing). Generally regards consumers as too ignorant and/or weak to be able to choose for themselves; essentially views them as victims of capitalist hegemony/exploitation, to be rescued by a predominantly benevolent and wise powerful central government.

  • Practical example as it applies to housing:
    As a sub-prime lender (aka loan predator), you have already proven yourself a danger and menace to society. You are a disgusting profiteer and should be permanently barred from doing business --and should go to "re-education" camp. Our Wise and Benevolent Supreme Leader will provide Affordable Housing for all the Impoverished Masses. It will favor high density, discourage mobility/private transport, encourage spartan living and require massive taxation --all for the greater good, of course. Most of the largest contracts to build this Affordable Housing will be awarded to personal friends and family members of Dear Leader, of course (who will keep his lavish lakeside villa far outside the city). All hail Dear Leader! (*cue rousing patriotic socialist anthem*).
  • Which form of regulation do you prefer? Based on the descriptions above, which one do you think the author (your truly) prefers? :-) What would be "good" examples of housing/mortgage market regulation (if any)? What would be some especially "bad" examples?

    Discuss, enjoy...
    HARM

    #housing

    « First        Comments 23 - 62 of 195       Last »     Search these comments

    23   speedingpullet   2006 Sep 21, 11:06am  

    LOL! I never thought of it that way. But who would contribute to pay the bounty hunters?

    "I'd buy that for a dollar!"

    (special Nerd points to anyone who knows the movie....)

    24   astrid   2006 Sep 21, 11:09am  

    (courtesy of google)

    Ughh, Robocop?

    25   requiem   2006 Sep 21, 11:14am  

    The good news is, urbandictionary thinks it predates Robocop.

    Picture a PayPal tip jar on Mr. Goodcat's personal website, every person with a clogged inbox adding some pocket change to the sum.. Oh yes, the numbers could add up very quickly.

    26   speedingpullet   2006 Sep 21, 11:15am  

    tchah...too easy...;-)

    Consider yourself 'nerded up level 2 p0wnd!'.

    27   Different Sean   2006 Sep 21, 11:40am  

    But since previous efforts at high level of government control tend to horribly wrong, I think I’ll tough it would with path 2.

    i suggest option 2½, which of course doesn't exist in the construction we've been presented with. i repeat, fabian socia1ism ≠ totalitarian state socia1ism. but, there is a spectrum of possibilities not represented in the options above, where 1 and 2 are almost indistinguishable in any real world implementation, and are not teleological or social policy driven, and the gap between 2 and 3 is vast...

    option 2 seems to produce all the gripes and pathologies that this blog likes to chew over...

    28   astrid   2006 Sep 21, 11:45am  

    speedingpullet,

    Man, only level 2 nerd! I started a post with a picture of Lady Jessica the bene gesserit (before she turned bene gesserit traitor, blah blah blah) for gawdsakes!

    29   astrid   2006 Sep 21, 1:34pm  

    It would be sad if Congress decided to further regulate realtors. What this market needs is to break up realtors as a cartel and push home buying towards large hourly fee based companies (preferably ones that can do everything in-house from financial counseling and taxes, to home inspection and document preparation).

    30   astrid   2006 Sep 21, 1:38pm  

    ajh,

    Draws won't work, but storage bins could work (for a while, did I mention my boyfriend has a five year backlog of his college paper and magazines that he refuses to throw away?). My problem goes beyond my boyfriend's packrat tendencies, he also likes to have papers covering every surface because he claims its easier to find stuff that way. He seems to subscribe to Sherlock Holmes's method of document archiving.

    31   astrid   2006 Sep 21, 1:41pm  

    draws = drawers

    32   Peter P   2006 Sep 21, 1:52pm  

    a dyed in the wool Utilitarian would HAVE to go for number 3 — greatest good for the greatest number…

    Why? I am a Utilitarian and I think number 1 and 2 are not necessarily bad, since #3 needs to work against human nature to realize it potentials. I do not believe human nature can be defeated.

    33   HARM   2006 Sep 21, 2:09pm  

    The outcome of this housing bust will be a “new beginning” to housing regulation and accountability for the unethical practices that belie this current industry... The end result will be a more efficient and credible housing market.

    @John, let's hope so. That would certainly be the ideal outcome.

    What this market needs is to break up realtors as a cartel and push home buying towards large hourly fee based companies (preferably ones that can do everything in-house from financial counseling and taxes, to home inspection and document preparation).

    Amen. RC's long been arguing in favor of exactly that --a fee-based model where you walk into a bank, go to the REO kiosk and browse their catalog of properties. Tour your picks, make your selection, apply for financing, get inspection --bam, 1-stop shopping. Hopefully all for a lot less than the 8-10% chunk each RE transaction takes out of your ass now.

    34   Different Sean   2006 Sep 21, 2:53pm  

    Drawers won’t work, but storage bins could work (for a while, did I mention my boyfriend has a five year backlog of his college paper and magazines that he refuses to throw away?). My problem goes beyond my boyfriend’s packrat tendencies, he also likes to have papers covering every surface because he claims its easier to find stuff that way. He seems to subscribe to Sherlock Holmes’s method of document archiving.

    i'm glad to know it's not just me then...

    35   Different Sean   2006 Sep 21, 3:31pm  

    politicians don't like to worry about real estate prices too much, because they are pretty sure the market is ultimately self-limiting -- prices will always be contained due to the fundamental of salaries and wages. there may be some tulip boom pain once in a while, but they're better off keeping out of it so they can't get the blame if something goes wrong with their interventions...and now we are seeing a price correction and high inventory, although it's hard to know how far down prices will come...

    they don't worry too much about conventional market failure, and see their role as providing residualised public housing for the bottom end only as a welfare state necessity...

    however, that's not to say it couldn't all change using generous state land grants, price covenants, and not for profit developers... as per the example of Bridge Housing in SF, for instance..

    36   Different Sean   2006 Sep 21, 3:35pm  

    We certainly are learning about how astoundingly bad government can be lately…

    speaking of which, dubya has taken a shellacking from hugo chavez and mahmoud ahmadinejad in the un recently -- they are interesting times when a claimed born again christian is accused of being the devil...

    37   Doug H   2006 Sep 21, 3:50pm  

    Comrades, the graphic Patrick chose clearly illustrates how the masses must fight against domestic reactionaries and Yankee Imperialists and their running dogs.....

    *slap* I've got to stop spending so much time reading that little red book my son sent me from China..

    38   Glen   2006 Sep 21, 9:51pm  

    At least Chavez never sanctioned torture, diverted tax dollars to private military contractors or attacked another country without provocation. Plus, it is fair to say that Chavez has done more for the poor in the US (subsidized heating oil for poor new yorkers) than Bush has done (diddly squat).

    I say this partly in jest. But seriously, for all his faults I think Chavez (or even Castro for that matter) is probably less toxic than Bush, Cheney et al.

    39   HeadSet   2006 Sep 21, 11:04pm  

    "Of course, you don’t see cronyism or nepotism with the Bush-Lockheed Martin-Texaco-Halliburton revolving door cartel in the free wheeling open market US of A… "

    This precisely why we do not want to give the government more power. It is odd that you justify adding more economic power to the government by using examples of a government abusing its existing power.

    If the banks could not sell housing loans to gov agencies designed for this purpose, and the banks had to take the risks themselves, there would have been no housing bubble. Down payments would have been required and borrowers would be qualified. Gov interference created the environment for the speculator and FB.

    40   DinOR   2006 Sep 22, 12:21am  

    HARM,

    The "catalog, one stop shopping" model you introduced is pretty much what *George has feared for some time. Major banks getting involved in retailing RE would basically spell the end for small, independent local shops. On one hand this would a tragedy. The Walmart effect if you will.

    On the other hand, NAR, CAR, legions of largely unregulated MB's have proven difficult if not impossible to regulate. The proof here sir is in the pudding.

    Take for instance a newly minted rookie realt-whore fresh out of "boot camp". They studied (not much granted) and covered their chapter on ethics and no sooner than they get their first sale than some "senior broker" or branch manager is showing them how "the system" really works! What appraisers to avoid, how to get around inspections, which MB's to use to get marginal clients to qualify. I could go on but you get the idea.

    The REIC will fight the "new beginning" tooth and nail. In the end, they will lose. Their half hearted effort at self regulation has failed miserably. Their self serving charter will become the focus of the FB/homeowners ire. At that point all of the economic reasons and well intentioned (but faulty) tax policies won't matter in their minds. Only getting back at those "that put them in this position" will matter.

    It's not only the end of the housing boom, it's the end of the Cartel (TM).

    41   Randy H   2006 Sep 22, 12:41am  

    Bush is a terrible president, weak leader, and has hired some of the worst foreign policy advisers since the 1800s.

    Ahmadinejahd denies the Holocaust occurred and believes the Protocols of the Elders of Zion to be factual. He has repeatedly called not only for the extermination of Israel, but also of all unrepentant Jews, which means all of them in context.

    Chavez is documented to use tactics like kidnapping and torturing wives and children of political enemies. Didn't he also arrest pretty much every domestic reporter who dared write or speak anything critical of him? And he uses Cuban security because he's under constant threat of internal assassination because of his strongarm tactics with his own military.

    I'm not so sure there's a moral equivalency here, but I do agree that they all three suck. We are living in a time with absolutely no leaders. That's the real problem.

    42   Glen   2006 Sep 22, 1:18am  

    Randy,

    True, all three suck. But the reason I might give Chavez the edge over Bush has to do with context. Chavez is the leader of a small country with a history of political instability and dictatorships. Bush is President of a large, overwhelmingly powerful country with a long history of open, democratic institutions and expanding civil rights. Yet they wind up at around the same place.

    Bush has tried to undermine the press through covert propaganda campaigns, he has undermined the political process through a variety of means (see Florida, '00, Ohio, '04, etc.), he has sanctioned torture, alienated the world community, started a war without provocation, etc., etc... Chavez has basically acted like a thug who is trying to hold on to power. Sort of like a gang leader/mafia don.

    Hard to say who is worse, but I think you need to consider the context. Otherwise, you would have to say that Jefferson was a worse president than Bush because he had slaves. At least Bush doesn't have slaves. But within his historical/political context Jefferson was quite progressive.

    43   Sylvie   2006 Sep 22, 1:20am  

    Take your pick It's the lesser of three evils. I will say that it was funny as hell to see the UN general assembly applaud when Chavez was trashing Bush. It is evident that the world hates GB's arrogance he does have a aura of unapproachability. That "my way or the highway" thing. It's pretty clear he is not well thought of in alot of the world. He has undone thirty years of diplomacy. Hopefully we don't have to endure this much longer mid term elections coming up. I think the GOP is done in 08 alot of folks are pissed off economically and are sick of Iraq.

    44   Randy H   2006 Sep 22, 2:10am  

    Glen

    I certainly agree that Bush is a much greater disappointment in proportion to the damage caused. I was referring to the tendency people have to drawing moral equivalency to character. I also don't think that comparing people across time/eras is at all relevant.

    But Bush has given us all the legacy of decades of global instability, when he had a golden opportunity of unprecedented global solidarity laid before his feet. Bush & his team continually compare the situation now to WWII. Ok. Compare Bush's leadership to the heroic leaders of WWII. That's the difference: how a leader responds to crisis and how a politician responds to crisis. One engages in strategy, plans for victory, builds solidarity across partisan divides, strengthens alliances, and does what is in the interest of the people. The other figures out how to win the next election, grabs for more power, and tries to get more of his own party entrenched, all while driving a stake of fear through any hope of broad cooperation.

    Who are our alternatives? I see absolutely no one on the horizon for 08. McCain? He is too principled, and will get eaten alive by his own party. Didn't they run the anti-McCain-because-he-has-a-black-love-child ads during the 00 primary? Hillary? Give me a break. Is it even worth it to vote anymore anyway? Unless you live in one of 2-3 states, your vote is mathematically and statistically irrelevant.

    45   skibum   2006 Sep 22, 3:05am  

    Sellers are bitchin' and moanin' about "pushy" buyers. Waah, waah!

    http://www.forbes.com/business/commerce/feeds/ap/2006/09/19/ap3028315.html

    46   Different Sean   2006 Sep 22, 3:08am  

    When I was in school in Japan I literally had Japanese students laugh and say very derisively “Clinton is your President!”

    what about the outgoing japanese president!!?? he loved elvis....

    47   skibum   2006 Sep 22, 3:10am  

    Different Sean Says:

    what about the outgoing japanese president!!?? he loved elvis….

    What do you mean? Did you see Koizumi's Elvis impersonation when he visited Graceland? That guy is cool! The shrub is just a dork.

    48   Randy H   2006 Sep 22, 3:12am  

    SFWoman,

    I believe there are ample mistranslations to both extremes. I try to cross-compare US & UK reported stories with what I read in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung and on FAZ.net. There has been no shortage of outrageous "missed translations" which were picked up in Farsi - German translations but ignored by Farsi - English translations. Of course, the Germans are a bit keen to counter any Holocaust deniers, for obvious reason.

    You'd think that US/UK MSM would at least pick up mainstream Euro reports of stuff Amadinejahd has said, especially since it would help Bush's "cause". But the 20-odd times he's proposed rounding up all the Jews (note, not all the Israelis, but all Jews) and relocating them to Germany have been all but missed in English MSM. He also has stated that every Jew is a Zionist, all Zionists should be killed, and anyone who doesn't actively work to exterminate Zionism and Zionist peoples is "Satanic" (no direct translation). Oh yea, everyone in the US and Europe is either a Zionist or a Muslim, except surprisingly, the Russians.

    Iran imposed a ban on the network and its reporters Monday after CNN misquoted the president as speaking of developing "nuclear weapons" when he actually referred to "nuclear energy."

    Funny. It was directly translated in German press as Kernteilmaterialien, which roughly means "nuclear component materials".

    Is Farsi that ambiguous?

    49   Different Sean   2006 Sep 22, 3:16am  

    This precisely why we do not want to give the government more power. It is odd that you justify adding more economic power to the government by using examples of a government abusing its existing power.

    i am suggesting govt should deliver affordable housing through a variety of means. the measure of their success woudl clearly be that they deliver housing at much less than market rates. this would be very easy to measure, i would think. if they couldn't do it, then it would be obvious and self-defeating.

    once, under the new deal, this would have been possible. given the way fema responds to crises like new orleans, perhaps it's not possible any more -- perhaps too many americans are too corrupt and indifferent and economically self-interested to deliver a workable solution... altho NYC has committed to creating 165,000 affordable places over the next 10 years...

    50   skibum   2006 Sep 22, 3:22am  

    Another MSM pity story about sellers unable to unload - talk about deer in the headlights!

    http://money.cnn.com/2006/09/22/real_estate/help_home_for_sale_young_ballanco/index.htm?postversion=2006092212

    51   Glen   2006 Sep 22, 3:32am  

    The MSM routinely portrays disfavored foreign leaders as loopy or dangerous if they meet two criteria: (1) leader of a country with large oil reserves; and (2) openly hostile to the US.

    I am not saying that Amadinejad, Chavez or Saddam Hussein, for that matter, deserve our respect. But we should at least think critically about the views spoonfed to us by the MSM.

    Why do dangerous and oppressive regimes like Musharef in Pakistan, the Saudi royals and Putin get a pass from the MSM? They are apparently just much better than Chavez and Amadinejad at playing us for fools. And Bush and his cronies fall right into the trap every time. Amateurs.

    52   Different Sean   2006 Sep 22, 3:38am  

    "We're planning on starting a family someday," says the 30-year-old Young, who builds simulation software for a defense contractor. "We wanted a bigger home - with a pool."

    The new house cost $562,000 so they were really counting on profits from the old place to help. They had paid $167,000 for their current four bedroom, two-and-a-half bath, 2,861 square foot contemporary that they bought new, on the last day of 2002.

    i see, this 30 year old is 'planning on starting a family someday' (nothing happening yet), so he, right now, needs a much bigger house than his current 4 br, 2½ bathroom mcmansion, one that costs 4 x his original house. you see, each and every new infant will require at least 3 bedrooms to spread out in... that's assuming he survives the economic darwinism test first... what a wanker...

    53   requiem   2006 Sep 22, 3:38am  

    DS:

    Culture often comes from the top of an organization, and works its way downward. Maybe it's just a case of "like hires like", but it's a very real phenomena. An administration that is interested only in profits and playing soldier is not going to be effective on the domestic front.

    At the root of the issues most have with "big business" and others have with "big government" is usually corruption. That makes it easy for defenders on either side to say "it's only a few bad apples, the system itself is fine". (Or is that used only for communism?)

    Hence, regulations, the bandaid solution. It means that we don't /need/ to punish the guilty, because now there's a Regulation. Eventually, enough regulations add up that people can say "look at how much all these unnecessary regulations are costing us", and then deregulation happens. (Wonders when SNL will run their old "we're the phone company" skit again.)

    The solution to regulation is proper enforcement of existing laws, which mean tackling corruption on the government side. My suspicion is that this is best done by placing competing interests in a position to police each other. (Wait... isn't that a recipe for gridlock?)

    54   Randy H   2006 Sep 22, 3:38am  

    Why do dangerous and oppressive regimes like Musharef in Pakistan, the Saudi royals and Putin get a pass from the MSM?

    a) Threat of escalation of nuclear war over Kashmir.
    b) Threat of loss of 90% of Europe's and Japan's crude, probably resulting in very unfavorable results.
    c) How can you threaten Russia, the only nuclear, modern military with largely self-sufficient resources other than the US? Didn't that scenario already play out the last half of the past century?

    I don't think Bush's cronies are dumb, or amateurs. To the contrary. I think they are overconfident professionals who've lost touch of pragmatic reality. Most of their strategy looks stellar on paper. Just doesn't work out so well in practice.

    55   Different Sean   2006 Sep 22, 3:40am  

    Is Farsi that ambiguous?

    i dunno. i had dinner with two iranian women tonight, i'll ask them ;)

    56   requiem   2006 Sep 22, 3:44am  

    Re: Young & Ballanco

    I wonder who took the photos for the article? The way he included the backyard fencing and neighbor's house in the koi pond pic, and the way the garage snout blocks out the front entrance just makes the place look oh-so-appetizing.

    57   skibum   2006 Sep 22, 3:47am  

    DS and requiem,

    So true! Reading that article, especially with that smarmy "couples" shot of the two of them, it seemed like a weird cross between a real estate add and one of those Jerry's kids telethon-like pleas for help.

    58   Different Sean   2006 Sep 22, 3:47am  

    they both need a good slapping....

    59   astrid   2006 Sep 22, 3:49am  

    Randy,

    There are choices beyond Hillary (Lieberman Lite and way too polarizing, her alleged suitability mainly pushed by the DNC and GOP operatives) and McCain (sold out in 2004, too old). I’m actually quite hopeful about the long term prospect of the Democratic Party. They’re working to build grass root organizations and pushing for a lot of moderate well intended people into office. I like Mark Warner for ’08 so far, but I’m open to any pragmatic results-oriented Progressive who hasn’t yet sold out.

    I’m with Glen on this. Different countries will produce different kinds of leaders. Sometimes there will be a significant deviation towards the good (TR and FDR) and sometimes there will be deviations towards the awful (Pol Pot). Iran and Venezuela has a pair of poor leaders, but Bush is a standard deviation further out on the wrong side than those two. Furthermore, as a leader of a far larger and much more powerful country, he is capable of doing much more damage.

    60   DinOR   2006 Sep 22, 3:50am  

    "Talk about deer in the headlights"

    skibum, you mean putting a koi pond with a little Japanese style bridge leading to a 12 sq. ft. area where the fences meet in the corner of your lot DON'T "add vale"?

    I love this stuff! Let's keep it coming. Sellers were SO abusive on the way up, let's see how well they handle the downturn. Paul McCulley (PIMCO) was just on CNBC and seemed to feel we could see rates trending down as early a Q1/07? Whatever. It should be obvious now that there will be sellers pain. They know that. It's unavoidable. Rate reductions in 07 will be too little too late for many FB's.

    61   astrid   2006 Sep 22, 3:50am  

    SQT,

    Considering that the Japanese had been voting the same (increasingly corrupt) LDP into power for 50 years and its PMs still visit a racist shrine every year, I’d say that’s the kettle calling the pot black. I think you were also there when there were some wrangling over US bases in Japan.

    62   astrid   2006 Sep 22, 3:54am  

    SFWoman,

    Great article. I don't know what's with young people nowadays. If you want to have kids you should be: living as frugally as possible, upgrade your job skills as much as you can and save as much money as possible. Not buy a McMansion you can't really afford on for the non-existent infants.

    « First        Comments 23 - 62 of 195       Last »     Search these comments

    Please register to comment:

    api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions   gaiste