Truthout...
Right
to Rent: Will the Obama
Administration Finally Fix Housing?
Monday 27 June 2011
by Dean Baker, Truthout
The
concept of “right to rent” has
been floating around Washington for almost four years. Under this
proposal,
foreclosed homeowners would be allowed to remain in their house as
renters,
paying the market rent, for a substantial period of time (e.g. five
years)
following a foreclosure. While several bills have been introduced in
Congress,
President Obama may now have a new opportunity to take the lead on this
issue.
The
overwhelming majority of mortgages
that have been issued since the financial meltdown in September of 2008
have
been bought by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac or insured by the Federal
Housing
Authority. This has led to an interesting, but predictable, outcome.
The most
recent data indicate that more than half of the new foreclosures are on
houses
where Fannie and Freddie either hold the mortgage or have insured the
mortgage-backed security in which it sits.
Rather
than being a problem for banks
to deal with, the problem of foreclosures is now primarily a government
problem, since the federal government now owns and controls Fannie and
Freddie.
This means that President Obama no longer has to beg the banks to allow
people
to stay in their homes. He can do it himself. And, he can show the
banks how to
do it right.
Read
the rest of the story at truthout
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