Sunday’s issue of The New York Times Magazine was all about “the dilemmas of debt”, and featured stories like:
- “Suze Orman is having a moment”, a profile of the popular personal-finance guru
- “What does your credit-card company know aobut you?”
- “The China puzzle”, which looks at the economic relationship between the U.S. and China
- And shorter articles about peer-to-peer lending, financial crises, and the nature of small banks
The piece that caught my attention, however, was a story from Edmund L. Andrews called “My personal credit crisis”. Andrews is a smart man, and a long-time economics reporter for The New York Times. You might think this would keep him from making financial mistakes. But you’d be wrong. He writes:
If there was anybody who should have avoided the mortgage catastrophe, it was I. As an economics reporter for The New York Times, I have been the paper’s chief eyes and ears on the Federal Reserve for the past six years. I watched Alan Greenspan and his successor, Ben S. Bernanke, at close range. I wrote several early-warning articles in 2004 about the spike in go-go mortgages. Before that, I had a hand in covering the Asian financial crisis of 1997, the Russia meltdown in 1998 and the dot-com collapse in 2000. I know a lot about the curveballs that the economy can throw at us.
But in 2004, I joined millions of otherwise-sane Americans in what we now know was a catastrophic binge on overpriced real estate and reckless mortgages. Nobody duped or hypnotized me. Like so many others — borrowers, lenders and the Wall Street dealmakers behind them — I just thought I could beat the odds.
Andrews’ story reads like a textbook example of how the housing market went awry. He and his wife had excellent credit, and so decided to stretch to afford the house they wanted. They gambled. They embraced the “get rich quick” mindset, which is never a good idea. You cannot cut corners and succeed.
Despite nagging doubts, Andrews and his wife continued to make choices that moved them from a position of relative comfort to deep debt — and crumbling credit. Along the way, they had plenty of help:
“Don’t worry,” Bob [a loan officer] reassured me, saying what almost everybody else in real estate was saying at that moment. “The value of your house will be higher in five years. You’ll be able to refinance.”
As I walked out of the settlement office with my loan papers, I couldn’t shake the sense of having just done something bad…but also kind of cool. I had just come up with almost a half-million dollars, and I had barely lifted a finger. It had been so easy and fast. Almost fun. I couldn’t help feeling like a high roller, a sophisticated player who could lay his hands on big money at a moment’s notice.
I’ve read a lot about the sub-prime mortgage crisis. I’ve even written a little about it, documenting my brother’s own battle with foreclosure. But most of the information I’ve come across has been second-hand. This story is told by the man who lived through it, and it provides an interesting glimpse into his motivation and rationalization.
[The New York Times: "My personal credit crisis"]
This article is about House and Home, News, Real-Life
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$220 cable/telephone/Internet bill for the past two months…
you only used to hear this kind of insanity from people in debtor’s anonymous. sure, you’re having panic attacks about money but don’t cancel the cable, oh no! People might find out that you’re broke!
I commend the author for being so honest about being a fool. There’s plenty I can point at to critique, but really, there but for the grace of God go I.
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Sorry for the tangent, folks, but did I read this quote correctly from the Suze Orman article?
“She (Suze Orman) has been reluctant to work on school curricula on personal finance, because she says students can’t learn empowerment from people who aren’t empowered, and teachers, she says, are too underpaid ever to have any real self-worth. She told me: ‘When you are somebody scared to death of your own life, how can you teach kids to be powerful? It’s not something in a book — it ain’t going to happen that way.’”
Did she really said that? Does she really have this opinion of teachers?!?
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Folks who think there’s more to this story than Andrews divulges (like JJ at #40) might like to see this blog post from a writer at the Atlantic that is making the rounds:
http://meganmcardle.theatlantic.com/archives/2009/05/the_road_to_bankruptcy.php
The gist of it is that his wife has filed for bankruptcy twice before, despite having six-figure family incomes.
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Julie at 52–I missed your remark on the first pass through the comments. I can’t vouch that she said that, but I was struck by it too when I read that article. What an incredibly ignorant and offensive statement–and a sterling example of what’s most screwed up about values in America.
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