06-06-2017, 04:52 PM
Here is Ben Bernanke former Fed chairman, when asked whether more could have been done for homeowners at the time of the financial crisis:
Saving the financial system was required stuff, without it the US economy would have spiralled down into a 1930s style depression. But saving families met with the ideologues..
Quote:My perceptions of that effort, though, speaking from someone who was outside of that policy effort, was that there were two big sets of constraints. One was that it’s just a lot harder than you think to, for example, to modify or restructure mortgages when the borrower is possibly unemployed, possibly not interested in talking to the bank or participating in a program. It was awfully difficult as a practical manner to manage the restructuring programs.Ben Bernanke explains what Donald Trump gets wrong on the economy - Vox
But the other part was that, people don’t remember this necessarily, it was actually very politically unpopular to help troubled homeowners. And Congress put lots of restrictions on what could be done, and tried to make sure there wasn’t any significant subsidy, for example. So within the inherent logistical difficulties, which were substantial, and the political constraints from Congress, the Treasury was hampered, I think, in its efforts. It did make, I think, a good-faith effort, and it did help millions of people.
Again, whether a bigger effort would’ve had more effect on the recovery, I’m not sure that it was a first-order issue. It certainly would’ve helped a lot of individual people, a lot of families. From the political point of view, it cuts both ways. The story is that the Tea Party was triggered not by anger necessarily at the financial players, but at the idea that the government would be helping people who had “overborrowed” or been irresponsible in taking out mortgages.
Saving the financial system was required stuff, without it the US economy would have spiralled down into a 1930s style depression. But saving families met with the ideologues..

