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Freeze my Gas Price
by Chuck DiFalco
© 2007 All
rights reserved.
December, 2007
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I want the price of my gas to be
frozen for five years. I don't care if everyone else pays more later on. I
deserve this break! My neighbor got his interest rate frozen, and now I want
something. I bought a large vehicle several years ago, and nobody told me I
couldn't afford to fill up my tank. It's not my fault. It's the gas stations'
fault. The oil companies' fault. The government's fault. The automaker's fault.
It's everyone else's fault that I can't pay! This is America; I have rights!
What really bothers me are the
talking heads on television who say that the President's gift, I mean "mortgage
relief," does not go far enough. Perhaps, though, I should tone down my satire.
After the silliness about freezing people's adjustable rate mortgage payments
for five years, crazy ideas like freezing gas prices just might make sense to
the affordability whiners of the USA.
How much, really, was fraud involved
in selling people these (upwardly) adjustable rate mortgages? Did the customers
not receive an amortization schedule? Were not the rules provided in writing in
plain English? Were the numbers misleadingly buried in paragraphs of financial
gobbledygook? If so, lender fraud must be prosecuted. However, salesmanship to
the tune of "you can always refinance later" should be taken with the same
skepticism as with car dealers. Selling a dream does not count as fraud. I do
not think, however, that malfeasance is at center of the problem with ARMs. The
far greater percentage of the "sub-prime" problem is with poor choices.
People who signed on the dotted line
for a house they couldn't afford should lose their house to foreclosure if they
can't make the payments. It's that simple. They probably won't make the same
mistake twice. America needs some people to lose, or else there can be no
winners. Imagine, at the end of the National League Football season, the
commissioner proclaiming, "No need for playoffs! No Super Bowl. No team will
lose! Everybody is a winner!" Actually, there are places in the world where the
government decrees that there will be no economic losers. In Communist Cuba, the
collective good supersedes private enterprise and consumer decisions, thus
making winning a criminal offense. The whole country loses.
Nor should bankrupt mortgage
companies be bailed out for bad lending decisions. "No documentation" ("liar")
loans do not constitute prudent business. I adore the genius of the acronym
artists. NINJA loans: no income, no job or assets. What? Two years later they
can't pay their note? No investors will buy the sub-prime products?
Irresponsible financial institutions should be allowed to fail as well. The
responsible ones - the ones that should survive this housing fiasco - would take
note and rededicate their commitment not to make the same goofs.
I don't put much stock in the
argument about lenders, responsible or irresponsible, not wanting to sell
adjustable rate mortgage products in the future for fear of government
intervention. I know, the supply of mortgages will go down, thereby driving
prices (i.e. interest rates) up. This kind of thinking belongs to another group
of price whiners. They think it's OK to sell anything to anybody, regardless of
whether it makes sense or not; inappropriate financial products and lead-laced
toys are all OK - the unregulated free markets will determine price. I counter
that there is a price in preventing a self-reinforcing greed and stupidity
epidemic. There must be some set of standards. If private organizations do not
create and enforce standards, then government must.
However, the real issue is more
fundamental than free markets with rules. What should be done is to affirm
personal responsibility. These politically incorrect words, though, won't get
much play as elections draw nearer.
© 2007 Chuck DiFalco. All
rights reserved.
Living in League City, Texas, Chuck DiFalco is a software engineer by day,
and an unconventional thinker and writer by night. He can be reached at
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