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Housing, a forgotten issue in US elections, still vexes economy

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(MCT) — WASHINGTON — Lost in the campaign arguments over who’s to blame for a weak economy and sluggish hiring is what has and hasn’t been done to improve home sales and housing finance, key causes of the nation’s severe financial crisis and ones that continue to drag against a robust recovery.

Two factors still bedevil housing: a huge inventory of foreclosed homes in the hands of banks and the federal government, and a huge number of homes that carry mortgages that are valued more than the dwellings are worth now — “underwater” mortgages.

The foreclosure problem is improving, albeit slowly. The Mortgage Bankers Association said in August that about 11.62 percent of all outstanding mortgages were in foreclosure from April through June or at least 30 days late on payments. That’s still high by historical standards, but it’s almost a full percentage point lower than during the same period a year ago.

Most vexing are the “underwater” mortgages. Many of these homeowners can neither sell their homes nor take advantage of refinancing programs. The Obama administration has relaxed the rules so that underwater borrowers can refinance, but the problem remains that many owe far more than their homes are worth now, regardless of what interest rates they pay on their mortgages. It’s why foreclosure rates, although falling, remain unusually elevated.

As a candidate in 2008, Barack Obama supported revamping bankruptcy laws in order to let homeowners have the courts order that the underwater portions of their mortgages be wiped out, similar to how companies that file for bankruptcy protection can shed their debts. This would have put banks on the hook for losses.

But as president, Obama has never fully pursued this, bowing to Republican opposition. The bankruptcy proposal is important, its backers say, in part because a mortgage often isn’t a borrower’s only debt. Many of these borrowers got so-called liar’s loans, accepting high-rate mortgages in exchange for being able to simply state their incomes.

Consequently, these borrowers have too much overall debt that needs restructuring relative to their incomes, said Michael Calhoun, the president of the Center for Responsible Lending, an advocacy group in Durham, N.C. A loan modification isn’t enough, given their high debt, he said.

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