Brendan Burgess
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“The good news is that if you leave investment mortgages out [of total mortgages owed], which are largely the banks’ problem, and look at mortgages people have on their own houses, there are about €55 billion of these out there,” he said.
Prof Kelly made his estimations based on 20 per cent of people having difficulty paying their mortgages. This was the default figure in Florida where there was a similar housing bubble, he said. He estimated that mortgages would need to be halved on average.
“ I would reckon that the ultimate cost of this very useful social programme is something in the region of €5 billion to €6 billion.”
In such a scheme mortgages would be reduced to a level “deemed affordable” while others would be allowed to leave their properties “without being pursued for outstanding debts”, he said.
He described as “ridiculous” the situation in which banks “have amounts set aside in their accounts for their mortgage losses but are not forgiving mortgages”. This was “something that needs to change”.
This is extraordinary stuff from a guy who is very influential. According to the Central Bank , the total loan accounts outstanding at the end of March 2011 was €116 billion.look at mortgages people have on their own houses, there are about €55 billion of these out there,” he said.
He says it's ridiculous that banks "have amounts set aside in their accounts for mortgage losses but are not forgiving mortgages".
It is good accounting practice and one of the core accounting principles- prudence -that provisions be made in accounts for possible bad debts.
It does not mean that every effort should not be made to recover all debts.
Prof Kelly said any debt forgiveness scheme would have to take account of adverse selection and moral hazard.
Can you imagine the uproar if this principle was applied to property developers?
If a bank has made a 70% provision against a loan, maybe then the borrower owes only 30% of the amount lent?
And NAMA could only seek repayment of the amount it paid for the loan and not the full amount.
This is extraordinary stuff from a guy who is very influential. According to the Central Bank , the total loan accounts outstanding at the end of March 2011 was €116 billion.
He may be excluding the securitised loans.
He may be excluding the loans from non-covered banks.
I thought the banks were set to lose €5-6bn "high rollers" alone according to Kelly, so how does the total including everyone else still only amount to €5-6bn.
Debt forgiveness on a selective basis wont work because the non-recipients will stop paying their debts.
This is exactly what will happen. As I said previously, it is happening already in anticipation of such a move on debt forgiveness.
In the case of Ireland, such a formula would most likely lead to an implicit writedown of at least 30 per cent of the more recent mortgage amounts on average, yielding an expected total cost to the entire system of circa €37 billion to €49 billion.
Let's take a mean figure (47+35/2) = 41% and apply it to the entire €116Bn = €47.56BnSince reaching their highest level, Residential Property Prices have fallen by almost 40% nationally, with Dublin experiencing the largest decline (-47%), while in the rest of Ireland prices fell at a somewhat lower rate (-35%).
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