Market, not bailouts, should stimulate refinancings

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Six weeks ago, my financial adviser (aka wife) told me we were refinancing our house. What happened next — more than anything
else that has happened this past year — made me truly uneasy about the pace of the economic recovery.

We refinanced a home purchased in 2007 through a very respectable financial institution. We have a conventional mortgage,
no debt and the remains of a once-reasonable 401(k). My employment prospects are at least average.

This should have been easy. It was not.

Unlike when I first received a mortgage on this house, the company now demanded an appraisal. I had to prove my salary, something
I didn’t have to do when we bought the house.

This was the most difficult of the five mortgage transactions I have done in my life. Oddly, the appraisal came back 10 percent
higher than when I bought the house (though, in all fairness, we’ve added some land and made significant repairs).

Still, if anyone wants to buy my house at 10 percent more than I paid for it in August 2007, please contact me immediately.
I will throw in furniture, a dog, goldfish, frog and child of your choice.

The problem with all these difficulties is that my financial institution hasn’t yet come to grips with reality. If I default
on the current loan, those folks get my house. That’s something they want to avoid in today’s real estate market.

So, just how low would the value of the house have to be before the financial institution wants to avoid refinancing? The
correct answer should be $0, because refinancing makes it far more likely I will continue to make payments, regardless of
the market value of my home.

The whole exercise was silly and scary at the same time. But policies designed to fix the problem are more frightening.

The proposed housing bailout offers some unlikely remedies. First, it offers to increase the incentive for banks to refinance
loans. But, the market incentive to do so has never, ever been higher — after all, it costs lenders roughly $40,000 a house
to go through foreclosure.

If banks aren’t now responding to the strongest refinancing incentive in history, no government plan will speed things along.

Second, the plan seeks to ease the terms of existing loans, making them less complicated and easier to refinance. This begs
the question: When has the government ever made a private transaction less complicated? The answer is precisely never. More
than half the signatures I had to provide on that most recent mortgage transaction were on government-mandated documents.

What the proposal does not do is find a way to allow banks to refinance mortgages that have been sold off into those now famous
"toxic assets" or how to refinance homes with double mortgages. This is one area where they could conceivably have an effect,
but at apparently too great a cost.

The real lesson here will be a familiar one. Markets, no matter how imperfect, not government programs, manage the economy.

___

Hicks is director of the Center for Business and Economic Research at Ball State University. His column appears weekly. He
can be reached at cber@bsu.edu.

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