As someone who drives a 17 year old car because I chose NOT to get a loan for a new car, who has an old kitchen and unfashionable bathroom because I did NOT get a loan for "doing up the house" I am furious that people who did not plan for the future should be rewarded by debt forgiveness.
I do not wish to see anyone thrown out of their house for being unable to afford the mortgage, but believe the debt should be held on file, and not "forgiven". I know of people who received windfalls and spent it on luxury holidays etc who are now in trouble with mortgage repayments. Why should I pay for their luxuries when I chose to live within my means?
I can quite understand those who are thinking of manoeuvering to take advantage of any debt forgiveness that might be available.
Sunny.There seems to be an almost 'they are getting what they deserve' attitude floating around.
http://www.independent.ie/opinion/editorial/price-of-holding-on-to-your-home-2860720.htmlNobody can be complacent about the figures that show 55,000 mortgages are in arrears for more than three months. And nobody can be unaware of the ocean of pain and anxiety of which the figure only indicates the surface.
But none of this comes anywhere near justifying the hysteria among the "chattering classes".
I think the debt forgiveness that would gall most people is a debt forgiveness that allows people to retain ownership of assets that, in hindsight, they can't afford. There will, of course, have to be the debt forgiveness that has always existed - when houses are repossessed and the banks accept that the bad debt will never be repaid. I personally think the only officially-structured debt forgiveness that will work is where the asset is given up and the borrower retains some level of debt - maybe a % of the amount outstanding after the house is sold, capped at some level and repayable on mortgage-type terms (low interest rate, long duration). Allowing someone to walk away with a completely clean slate is unfair to those who are managing to meet their negative equity commitments - and would encourage more people to somehow not be able to meet their commitments.
Why should someone lose the asset and then have debt follow them? The banks took as much risk in the transaction as the mortgage holder but this isn't reflected when things go bad. There is nothing unfair about the mortgage holder giving the bank the asset as settlement for the outstanding mortgage.
Hi Sunny,
I agree with this in principle, but the fact here is that the government (ie the taxpayer) now owns the banks. If there is a shortfall after the bank actually sell the house (not merely accepting the house back) then this is a loss payable by the taxpayer. Perhaps it would be fairer to all if a large portion of this remaining debt (such as 50%) followed the mortgage owner and payable over a long period of time at a low interest? That way they are clear of the mortgage but still pay something which the taxpayer isn't on the hook for.
The fact that the Banks are owned by the State isn't the fault of the struggling mortgage holder. The same mortgage holders are (were once) also taxpayers. Also, not all banks are owned by the State. There is going to be a cost to the State in all of this one way or another. We can either spend the next 5 years coming up with mad schemes to try and put off the inevitable or we can bite the bullet, realise that some people cannot afford their mortgages and deal with it. And the only way to deal this is through insolvency legislation. I am not saying this should be a get out of jail debt free card but bankruptcy shouldn't be a life sentance for people either.
I don't like paying for wealthy pensioners to have medical cards. I don't like paying for child benefit. I don't like paying for numerous things that our tax dollars get spent on. Adding more capital into banks to deal with genuine hardship cases if needs be is just one other thing on the long list.
This is very much about negative equity. We have always had people unable to pay their mortgage but people in negative equity don’t have the out that non-negative equity people have – sell the property, pocket the positive equity and start again. The big difference now is that people in NE are trapped.This isn't about negative equity. This is about people unable to meet their mortgate repayments.
Mad concept like ‘they still owe the money’?Why should someone lose the asset and then have debt follow them?
There’s everything unfair about it. This would be allowing people a one-way bet – house prices go up, I win; house prices go down, I hand the property back to the bank. Irish mortgage lending is not generally set up on this non-recourse basis so it can’t be changed in hindsight (well not without retrospectively changing all the contracts). I think there’s a lot to be said for structuring mortgage-lending this way (I think most US mortgages are done this way) – but it would mean that people would need much larger % deposits and the banks would be extremely picky about who they lend to – not a bad thing, but home ownership would become a lot less common than it is now.There is nothing unfair about the mortgage holder giving the bank the asset as settlement for the outstanding mortgage.
How is this different to what I suggested? – hand back asset, pay back what you can over time.This doesn't mean that everyone in negative equity gets to hand back their keys. You can't just into court and declare yourself bankrupt and it is easy enough to put steps in place to ensure that only genuine 'unable' to pay cases are allowed to declare themselves bankrupt. These people should then spend a reaosnable amount of time paying back whatever debt they can (if any) and then be allowed to start again.
This is very much about negative equity. We have always had people unable to pay their mortgage but people in negative equity don’t have the out that non-negative equity people have – sell the property, pocket the positive equity and start again.
This is very much about negative equity. We have always had people unable to pay their mortgage but people in negative equity don’t have the out that non-negative equity people have – sell the property, pocket the positive equity and start again. The big difference now is that people in NE are trapped.
Mad concept like ‘they still owe the money’?There’s everything unfair about it. This would be allowing people a one-way bet – house prices go up, I win; house prices go down, I hand the property back to the bank. Irish mortgage lending is not generally set up on this non-recourse basis so it can’t be changed in hindsight (well not without retrospectively changing all the contracts). I think there’s a lot to be said for structuring mortgage-lending this way (I think most US mortgages are done this way) – but it would mean that people would need much larger % deposits and the banks would be extremely picky about who they lend to – not a bad thing, but home ownership would become a lot less common than it is now.
How is this different to what I suggested? – hand back asset, pay back what you can over time.
I agree with all of that, but I think it should be a case for case basis. Someone who borrowed recklessly IMO shouldn't be able to walk away scott-free with the rest of us picking up the tab. Consider someone who got a 95% plus mortgage for property for 800k that they now can't afford. All they'll lose is the 5% deposit (40k). This house is probably now worth somewhere around 450k. Do we pay for the other 400k? If so, then the phrase "Sure you can't lose with property" springs to mind
We have always had people unable to pay their mortgage - even in boom times people lost their jobs, separated, divorced, had failed businesses etc. - why does the problem need different solutions just because it's a more extensive problem now?The problem is not negative equity. That only takes away the option of selling the property to pay back the debt. Negative equity doesn't cause mortgage arrears which is what we are talking about. It removes an option for struggling mortgage holders and causes a problem for banks when the repocess properties.
And yet we have people on AAM looking for advice on going abroad for an easier bankruptcy. Making bankruptcy easier will undoubtedly encourage more people into the process. I know if I was facing having to pay a 400K mortgage that I couldn't afford on a property worth 200K, I would be quite happy to go the bankruptcy route to get my life back. And if I could just about afford the mortgage but had a poor quality of life, I would go down that route too. And if I could afford the mortgage but wanted to start getting some luxuries back into my life (because I'm worth it), I might go down that route too. Clean slate looks so much more appealing than a personal balance sheet of negative 200K...It's not a one way bet. There are still consequences. BANKRUPTCY. I am not talking about people going into Court, declaring themselves bankrupt and then walking out the door with a big smile on their face and drinking champagne.
Again, people need to stop thinking that going bankrupt is just waving goodbye to debts and getting away scott free.
We have always had people unable to pay their mortgage - even in boom times people lost their jobs, separated, divorced, had failed businesses etc. - why does the problem need different solutions just because it's a more extensive problem now?
And yet we have people on AAM looking for advice on going abroad for an easier bankruptcy. Making bankruptcy easier will undoubtedly encourage more people into the process. I know if I was facing having to pay a 400K mortgage that I couldn't afford on a property worth 200K, I would be quite happy to go the bankruptcy route to get my life back. And if I could just about afford the mortgage but had a poor quality of life, I would go down that route too. And if I could afford the mortgage but wanted to start getting some luxuries back into my life (because I'm worth it), I might go down that route too. Clean slate looks so much more appealing than a personal balance sheet of negative 200K...
We have always had people unable to pay their mortgage - even in boom times people lost their jobs, separated, divorced, had failed businesses etc. - why does the problem need different solutions just because it's a more extensive problem now?
And yet we have people on AAM looking for advice on going abroad for an easier bankruptcy.
The trick will be to make bankruptcy unpalatable enough so that the people that can pay, continue to pay, but make it a viable option for those that are hopelessly trapped and will never be able to pay off their debts.
3 years or so of the present regime (i.e. your income is managed by a 3rd party) followed by... maybe 15 years suspension from being able to apply for a mortgage or loan over 5000 euro?
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