A Moment of Clarity.
Words.
"If you want to understand why the Occupy movement has found such
traction, it helps to listen to a former banker like James Theckston. He
fully acknowledges that he and other bankers are mostly responsible for
the country’s housing mess.
As a regional vice president for Chase Home Finance in southern Florida,
Theckston shoveled money at home borrowers. In 2007, his team wrote $2
billion in mortgages, he says. Sometimes those were “no documentation”
mortgages.
“On the application, you don’t put down a job; you don’t show income;
you don’t show assets,” he said. “But you still got a nod.”
“If you had some old bag lady walking down the street and she had a decent credit score, she got a loan,” he added.
Theckston says that borrowers made harebrained decisions and exaggerated
their resources but that bankers were far more culpable — and that all
this was driven by pressure from the top.
...These less savvy borrowers were disproportionately blacks and Latinos,
he said, and they ended up paying a higher rate so that they were more
likely to lose their homes. Senior executives seemed aware of this
racial mismatch, he recalled, and frantically tried to cover it up.
...In late 2008, when the mortgage market collapsed, Theckston and most of
his colleagues were laid off. He says he bears no animus toward Chase,
but he does think it is profoundly unfair that troubled banks have been
rescued while troubled homeowners have been evicted.
...what is scandalous is the basic unfairness of what has transpired. The
federal government rescued highly paid bankers from their reckless
decisions. It protected bank shareholders and creditors. But it mostly
turned a cold shoulder to some of the most vulnerable and least
sophisticated people in America. Last year alone, banks seized more than one million homes.
...That’s why the Occupy movement resonates so deeply: When the federal
government goes all-out to rescue errant bankers, and stiffs homeowners,
that’s not just bad economics. It’s also wrong."
THE NEW YORK TIMES: A Banker Speaks, With Regret
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