Frank’s fingerprints are all over the financial fiasco

“THE PRIVATE SECTOR got us into this mess. The government has to get us out of it.”
That’s Barney Frank’s story, and he’s sticking to it. As the Massachusetts Democrat has explained it in recent days, the current financial crisis is the spawn of the free market run amok, with the political class guilty only of failing to rein the capitalists in. The Wall Street meltdown was caused by “bad decisions that were made by people in the private sector,” Frank said; the country is in dire straits today “thanks to a conservative philosophy that says the market knows best.” And that philosophy goes “back to Ronald Reagan, when at his inauguration he said, ‘Government is not the answer to our problems; government is the problem.’ ”

In fact, that isn’t what Reagan said. His actual words were: “In this present crisis, government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem.” Were he president today, he would be saying much the same thing.

Because while the mortgage crisis convulsing Wall Street has its share of private-sector culprits — many of whom have been learning lately just how pitiless the private sector’s discipline can be — they weren’t the ones who “got us into this mess.” Barney Frank’s talking points notwithstanding, mortgage lenders didn’t wake up one fine day deciding to junk long-held standards of creditworthiness in order to make ill-advised loans to unqualified borrowers. It would be closer to the truth to say they woke up to find the government twisting their arms and demanding that they do so – or else.

The roots of this crisis go back to the Carter administration. That was when government officials, egged on by left-wing activists, began accusing mortgage lenders of racism and “redlining” because urban blacks were being denied mortgages at a higher rate than suburban whites.

The pressure to make more loans to minorities (read: to borrowers with weak credit histories) became relentless. Congress passed the Community Reinvestment Act, empowering regulators to punish banks that failed to “meet the credit needs” of “low-income, minority, and distressed neighborhoods.” Lenders responded by loosening their underwriting standards and making increasingly shoddy loans. The two government-chartered mortgage finance firms, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, encouraged this “subprime” lending by authorizing ever more “flexible” criteria by which high-risk borrowers could be qualified for home loans, and then buying up the questionable mortgages that ensued.

All this was justified as a means of increasing homeownership among minorities and the poor. Affirmative-action policies trumped sound business practices. A manual issued by the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston advised mortgage lenders to disregard financial common sense. “Lack of credit history should not be seen as a negative factor,” the Fed’s guidelines instructed. Lenders were directed to accept welfare payments and unemployment benefits as “valid income sources” to qualify for a mortgage. Failure to comply could mean a lawsuit.

As long as housing prices kept rising, the illusion that all this was good public policy could be sustained. But it didn’t take a financial whiz to recognize that a day of reckoning would come. “What does it mean when Boston banks start making many more loans to minorities?” I asked in this space in 1995. “Most likely, that they are knowingly approving risky loans in order to get the feds and the activists off their backs . . . When the coming wave of foreclosures rolls through the inner city, which of today’s self-congratulating bankers, politicians, and regulators plans to take the credit?”

Frank doesn’t. But his fingerprints are all over this fiasco. Time and time again, Frank insisted that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were in good shape. Five years ago, for example, when the Bush administration proposed much tighter regulation of the two companies, Frank was adamant that “these two entities, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, are not facing any kind of financial crisis.” When the White House warned of “systemic risk for our financial system” unless the mortgage giants were curbed, Frank complained that the administration was more concerned about financial safety than about housing.

Now that the bubble has burst and the “systemic risk” is apparent to all, Frank blithely declares: “The private sector got us into this mess.” Well, give the congressman points for gall. Wall Street and private lenders have plenty to answer for, but it was Washington and the political class that derailed this train. If Frank is looking for a culprit to blame, he can find one suspect in the nearest mirror.

Jeff Jacoby can be reached at jacoby@globe.com.
© Copyright 2008 Globe Newspaper Company.

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One Response to “Frank’s fingerprints are all over the financial fiasco”

  1. Beachcomber says:

    Right-on article…coincides with my own eblast last week about “who’s really burning down the house”_ it’s a great history lesson that should be stated over & over again until election day. Of course, the in-the-bag lame-stream media won’t say anything. They believe in “managed markets”.

    Fox News has been re-running a complete story all weekend about the CRA (Community Reinvestment Act) which I’ve taken the liberty to rename, the Community Redistribution Act. Just because the libs haven’t been in majority until the Nov 2006 elections, doesn’t mean they haven’t gotten their way — With exception to the “Reagan revolution”, the country has been being pulled left towards socialism since Pres. Carter (actually since FDR – WWII stalled it for awhile in the 1940’s). It accelerated more when Pres. Clinton revised the CRA in 1995. http://en.wikipedia.org:80/wiki/Community_Reinvestment_Act

    Summing it up, first FDR’s “New Deal” and the Glass Steagal act of 1933 (which had some good provisions, like FDIC etc) then in 1977 Carter signed in the CRA , then Clinton’s revisions to the CRA 1995 and Glass Steagal’s revisions in 1999. Then came along Shummer, Dodd, Franks and Waters…More recently, Barney Frank working thru ACORN (who received $760 Mil in fees alone) started muscling regional & community banks in the Chicago area, calling them racist if they didn’t conform to the affordable loan provisions of the CRA. They used Jessie Jackson tactics to intimidate them. On-&-on, right up to the junk status that “Subprime-loans” gave us in the “Bailout Bill”. And now, we may get a Pres. Obama who has ties to many subversives such as the ACORN group!

    It’s a sad day when Americans believe this diatribe about free markets being the enemy. Not that McCain is making much of a case for capitalism. If he’d let Sarah loose she’d do a great job exposing these truths for him!

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