Added: 3 years ago
From: seeprogress
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  • The housing crisis is really a crisis of land speculation since land is the only value that really goes up when property is speculated with. The crisis is periodic, about every 18 years there is a cycle of boom and bust in the real estate, i.e. land speculation market. The crisis will not be over until land values fall back to level where people can afford to buy again. The best guess is that land values, property values, were at least 50% over real value. There is a real long term solution.

  • research the Federal Reserve folks....read The Creature From Jeckyll Island and you'll realize that the Federal Reserve has complete control over the economy.

  • THIS IS INSANE ! This market is a free market and the government shouldn't be bailing anyone out ! These prices were based on fraud and the lenders are at fault . Let them die like any business that commits fraud.

  • So lets get this straight. The government has already printed $29 billion in money they don't have to bailout Bear Sterns. Now, in order to bailout more lenders and now borrowers they will print 10X more $ than they again, don't have. And, with the huge number of Option ARMS reseting many show that this bailout will be a drop in the bucket and just further erode the dollar with little end result help to the housing problem. Your best bet is to let it get done, without the Govt.

  • you sound like hoover...

    Hoover feared that too much intervention or coercion by the government would destroy individuality and self-reliance.he preferred a voluntary, non-government approach to economic recovery.

    did'nt work the 1st time.y try again?

  • at this kind of housing price, even government cannot afford to buy.

  • Screw using any tax payer money to help borrowers or banks.

  • So your solution is to let more houses slip into forclosure, which drops the value of all our houses. Since my home is my biggest investment, I would really like to see the equity value increase instead of fall like it has been, wouldn't you? Or do you have some solution that involves pretending a problem doesn't exist? Tell me how sticking your head in the sand and not taking any action will boost our economy?

  • I got cash, your a fool for buying a home in the USA in the last 5 years. Let a free market do it's job.

  • You got cash... So?? You and I would have more cash if the housing crisis does not drag the economy down that much more. A fool for buying a home? So instead of investing in your future by purchasing a home you suggest renting? You must not be too bright.

  • "So your solution is to let more houses slip into forclosure, which drops the value of all our houses"

    Housing prices are going to fall regardless simply because they are unsustainable at current wages. Prices rose fair too high and too quickly. There were a number of us who say this 4 years ago and did not wish to get involved, so why should we have to pay?

  • Where are you talking about? I know that where I live, 6 years ago I bought a 1300 sq foot house with 2.3 acres for 110k, not too expensive and that was no where close to the cheapest. You need to lower your expectations and do like the rest of us, purchase small, improve, add value/equity, sell for a profit, get a bigger/better house, repeat.

  • "I would really like to see the equity value increase instead of fall like it has been, wouldn't you?"

    What you do not realise is that there is a silent majority out there who want home prices to fall so that they will be affordable again. Why do you think that having home prices so high that people have to pay 70% of there take-home pay to make an intrest-only payment is a good thing?

  • I would like to see where you get your info of this "silent majority". Houses are affordable if your expectations are not unrealistic and you don't purchase something that is going to cost you 70% of take home.

  • You obviously do not live in L.A. where 2 bedroom home in a shit area flooded with illegal aliens costs about $500,000. If I could get a home like you described above, I'd pay for it in cash.

  • Nope, I don't live in LA, I live in TN. And if you have 110k in cash, a move out of LA should be a snap. Don't bitch and moan because you live in an area where the housing market is obscenely inflated compared to the rest of the country.

  • California has some of the most restrictive building policies in the US. The housing bubble has been going there long before subprime lending inflated it further.

    Height restrictions, rent controls, green laws, etc constitute a majority of the home costs there. LA isn't nearly as bad as San Fran, though, in terms of artificial prices.

    Yay, government! Google it, get informed, get mad!

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