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God's Politics

A Moral Mandate for Financial Reform

by Rachel Anderson 10-14-2009

After all the financial turmoil that 2009 has already brought, one would think that it would somehow be logical and practical to bring accountable reforms to  the same banking institutions whose reckless practices brought about our current recession. Unfortunately, that needed effort is anything but easy.

This week, Congress will take its first vote on financial reform. Amidst the discussion of derivatives, credit ratings, and systemic risk, there is an important step that the administration has proposed to deal with family finances: the creation of a Consumer Finance Protection Agency (CFPA).  CFPA would oversee home loans, credit cards and other financial services, ensuring that loans would be offered on terms that borrowers can repay and the true costs of credit appear in easily understood terms.

CFPA would address the very abuses that are at the heart of our current crisis – high cost and unsustainable home loans that were extended without concern for a family’s ability to pay them back (and often to low and moderate income borrowers who could least afford them). CFPA would also bring under federal oversight fringe financial services like payday and car title loans that often mean a debt trap for families.

Right now, banking industry lobbyists are doing their best to thwart congressional discussions on CFPA. To get the real reform we need, all of us will need to be just as engaged.

As Christians, we have particular wisdom to share in this debate. The Bible commends those who lend justly and generously (Psalm 112:5), while opposing lending that oppresses those who are poor. Fair lending practices and the protection if the vulnerable are seen as the hallmarks of a just society (Exodus 22:25-26; Leviticus 25).

Religious leaders like Catholic Cardinal Theodore McCarrick were among the first to sound an alarm about unsustainable and predatory mortgage lending to low-income and vulnerable communities. He called these practices usurious and “morally illicit.”

As Congress undertakes financial reform, they need your wisdom and values.

In defense of our most vulnerable people, ask Congress to support reform that restores integrity and justice to our financial system.

Reform won’t be easy after all; but it will become more likely if we speak up NOW.

Rachel Hope Anderson works at the Center for Responsible Lending. You can follow her writing about faith, debt and lending on twitter and read more on predatory lending and the financial crisis here.

Categories: Activism, Economics
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  • It sounds like a noble idea, but at what expense? There's nothing inherently bad about government protecting people from actual destructive behavior. That's kinda the purpose of government, is it not?

    But if we are truly to seek financial reform, this sort of thing is merely a band-aid approach to the problems. Deep reform is necessary before the system self-destructs, as it is beginning to do. We can talk about regulation until we are blue in the face, but until we actually get rid of the source of the problem, band-aids and pain killer only go so far.

    The Bible talks about just weights and measures as a monetary foundation of a society. It also condemns the love of money as the root of all kinds of evil. Our current monetary system has a foundation in the Federal Reserve System, a central bank that is inherently counter to a sound money supply. The absence of a gold standard results in loose money by both the Fed and Congress (who are inextricably linked by political means), who depreciate our money for the wealthy at the expense of the poor. It's fraud, it's theft, and it needs to stop!

    Until the underlying problem is addressed, we'll not have true economic reform and justice in our nation.
  • Ngchen
    First, IIRC the Fed governors are appointed and confirmed by Congress, and afterward cannot be fired which provides it with some independence. (Economists have noted that there is a conflict of interest if current politicians were allowed to also be the fed.)

    Now, the Fed is charged with maintaining price stability and economic growth. Is the current money "loose?" I don't think so. Inflation is often described as a tax on those with money, and therefore the rich fear it. The poor sometimes also fear it, because it reduces the value of the little money they do have. Debtors like it, since it reduces the value of their debt (however if the inflation is foreseen, then it would be factored in to the loan terms). Currently inflation is in the low single percentage points for most things, which is not a lot. The classic argument against the gold standard is that if one does not trust the monetary authorities to not abuse their power, then one cannot trust an abandonment of the gold standard when it's inconvenient either! A second argument would be that there is nothing magical about gold that gives it intrinsic value either.
  • When I said "loose monetary policy," I meant that the Fed had the ability to play fast and loose with the interest rate, therefore distorting prices and increasing the money supply. While most people accept this as "normal," I myself find that it is unethical and unacceptable for people to be in that much control over the money supply.

    Gold itself may not have intrinsic value, but one cannot simply create gold out of thin air as you can with fiat currency. With gold the amount of money does intrinsically stabilize because nobody can simply debase it without counterfeiting, which is what the Fed is involved in doing, albeit with the government's permission.
  • nusrat
    The things you have mentioned are wonderful and I am glad to be the part of it.
    Tia Smith
    debt consolidation
  • BarbaraAnnJackson
    Certain mortgage lenders have a practice of DELIBERATELY engaging an enormous amount of non-valid foreclosures! The recent ruling by Judge Long of Massachusetts against Wells Fargo is yet ANOTHER flag that proves authorities need to swiftly and thoroughly investigate foreclosure frauds that cause people to FALSELY lose ownership of their properties and be evicted. These companies hire debt collector attorneys who deliberately file judicial foreclosures under names of defunct mortgage companies, or companies which do not own the promissory notes; and charge fees far beyond "Acceleration Clauses," thereby making it impossible for borrowers to recover their properties or bring current the mortgage arrears. (I can prove this about Wells Fargo when the times comes.)

    In some instances, through use of a false mortgage holder’s name, the collection lawyer actually is the disguised foreclosing plaintiff who wounds up with ownership of foreclosed property. Both colluding lawyers and mortgage companies benefit from this kind fraud as the collector lawyer acquires and FLIPS the property, the mortgage companies go on to file false IRS false form 1099-A’s to receive tax credits. Also, for fraudulent foreclosures, the lawyers file falsified Bankruptcy Court “Lift Stay” motions; and carry out SIMULATED auctions. For unscrupulous law firms, borrowers who become delinquent on payments are gold mines! But debt from a mortgage loan is NOT the only debt collection abuse!!! Too often rather than the agenda being repayment from the borrower, the goal is to rake in mega bucks from corporations that pay those legal tabs. And worse, if a debtor protests unfair collection tactics, the consequences include horrific judicial persecution, blacklisting from employment and incredible invasion of privacy, and more! *READ about fraudulent foreclosures, debt collection abuse, and judicial collusion:

    “Lack of Legal Help: One More Way the Deck Is Stacked Against Homeowners,”
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/arianna-huffingto...

    Illegal Foreclosures & Evictions, Appalling Lender / Lawyer Abuses, Impediments to Justice posted at: http://newsblaze.com/story/20091011141440lawg.n...

    “Piling On: Borrowers Buried by Fees” by Gretchen Morgenson http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/20/business/20gr...

    “DEBTOR’S HELL”, a 4-part investigation by the Boston Globe http://www.boston.com/news/specials/debt/

    "IRS Tax Advocate Renews Criticism of Private Collectors"
    http:// money.cnn.com/news/newsfeeds/articles/djf500/200803131508DOWJONE ..

    “State bar releases list of attorneys under investigation in connection with foreclosure crisis” http://lakeconews.com/content/view/10399/773/

    “Crisis, Lender Deceptions, Biased Courtrooms, Consumer Responsibility and Disadvantages”
    http://www.oprah.com/community/blogs/lawgrace/2...
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