Brendan Burgess
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Egil Rokhaug who is a lawyer working for the Norwegian government gave an account of the Norwegian system.
Norway has 80% home ownership.
They had a big housing bubble which burst in 1987 and hit the bottom in 1993 with falls of 50% to 60%.
There was a rapid increase in evictions.
In 1993 The Debt Settlement Act was introduced
Where a person was permanently incapable of paying his mortgage and where the deal is not offensive to other debtors or society...
The borrower must try to reach a voluntary settlement with the lender - they have 4 months to try this.
If the Creditors don't agree to a voluntary settlement ( not sure what percent) , the borrower can apply for a compulsory one.
There are 300 enforcement officers deployed throughout Norway who make the decision.
Section 4.4 sets out the criteria
The objective is to avoid forced sales.
It will give creditors a better outcome
There is a 5 year payment programme.
The mortgage is split into two parts
Any surplus is paid to the unsecured creditors including the unsecured bit of the mortgage.
After 5 years, any balance over the initial current value + 10% is written off permanently.
Example
1987 |bought house for €300k with a mortgage of |€300k
1993 |house value had fallen to |100k
1993 -1998 |pays interest on |€110k
1998| mortgage reduced to |€110k
As it happens, by 1998, the market had recovered to its peak, so the guy who availed of this had a house worth €300k with a mortgage outstanding of €110k.
Statistics
In around half of debt settlements, there is a home involved.
In 70% of these cases, the home was kept. (Presumably in 30% of the cases the drop in income was so catastrophic that the borrower could not even pay the interest on the equivalent value of the home)
In only 20% of the cases, is there any payment to unsecured creditors. Where there is a payment, it is only around 20% of the amount due.
There have been 2,500 to 3,000 of these settlements involving houses since 1993 when the law was introduced.
35% were achieved on a voluntary basis.
85% of debtors completed the settlement successfully.
Despite worries beforehand, this system has not changed the banks attitude to lending. They have not restricted their lending as a result of this legislation. They have not pushed up the interest rate.
Although Norway is thriving at the moment, 2011 was a record year for debt settlements, mainly due to consumer debt and credit cards.
Norway has 80% home ownership.
They had a big housing bubble which burst in 1987 and hit the bottom in 1993 with falls of 50% to 60%.
There was a rapid increase in evictions.
In 1993 The Debt Settlement Act was introduced
Where a person was permanently incapable of paying his mortgage and where the deal is not offensive to other debtors or society...
The borrower must try to reach a voluntary settlement with the lender - they have 4 months to try this.
If the Creditors don't agree to a voluntary settlement ( not sure what percent) , the borrower can apply for a compulsory one.
There are 300 enforcement officers deployed throughout Norway who make the decision.
Section 4.4 sets out the criteria
The objective is to avoid forced sales.
It will give creditors a better outcome
There is a 5 year payment programme.
The mortgage is split into two parts
- Current value +10% (which is regarded as secured)
- Unsecured
Any surplus is paid to the unsecured creditors including the unsecured bit of the mortgage.
After 5 years, any balance over the initial current value + 10% is written off permanently.
Example
1993 |house value had fallen to |100k
1993 -1998 |pays interest on |€110k
1998| mortgage reduced to |€110k
As it happens, by 1998, the market had recovered to its peak, so the guy who availed of this had a house worth €300k with a mortgage outstanding of €110k.
Statistics
In around half of debt settlements, there is a home involved.
In 70% of these cases, the home was kept. (Presumably in 30% of the cases the drop in income was so catastrophic that the borrower could not even pay the interest on the equivalent value of the home)
In only 20% of the cases, is there any payment to unsecured creditors. Where there is a payment, it is only around 20% of the amount due.
There have been 2,500 to 3,000 of these settlements involving houses since 1993 when the law was introduced.
35% were achieved on a voluntary basis.
85% of debtors completed the settlement successfully.
Despite worries beforehand, this system has not changed the banks attitude to lending. They have not restricted their lending as a result of this legislation. They have not pushed up the interest rate.
Although Norway is thriving at the moment, 2011 was a record year for debt settlements, mainly due to consumer debt and credit cards.