By PAUL KRUGMAN
Published: March 13, 2011
Count me among those who were glad to see the documentary “Inside Job” win an Oscar. The film reminded us that the financial crisis of 2008, whose aftereffects are still blighting the lives of millions of Americans, didn’t just happen — it was made possible by bad behavior on the part of bankers, regulators and, yes, economists.
 What the film didn’t point out, however, is that the crisis has spawned a  whole new set of abuses, many of them illegal as well as immoral. And  leading political figures are, at long last, showing some outrage.  Unfortunately, this outrage is directed, not at banking abuses, but at  those trying to hold banks accountable for these abuses.        
 The immediate flashpoint is a proposed settlement between state  attorneys general and the mortgage servicing industry. That settlement  is a “shakedown,” says Senator Richard Shelby of Alabama. The money  banks would be required to allot to mortgage modification would be  “extorted,” declares The Wall Street Journal. And the bankers themselves  warn that any action against them would place economic recovery at  risk.        
 All of which goes to confirm that the rich are different from you and  me: when they break the law, it’s the prosecutors who find themselves on  trial.        
 To get an idea of what we’re talking about here, look at the complaint  filed by Nevada’s attorney general against Bank of America. The  complaint charges the bank with luring families into its  loan-modification program — supposedly to help them keep their homes —  under false pretenses; with giving false information about the program’s  requirements (for example, telling them that they had to default on  their mortgages before receiving a modification); with stringing  families along with promises of action, then “sending foreclosure  notices, scheduling auction dates, and even selling consumers’ homes  while they waited for decisions”; and, in general, with exploiting the  program to enrich itself at those families’ expense.        
 The end result, the complaint charges, was that “many Nevada consumers  continued to make mortgage payments they could not afford, running  through their savings, their retirement funds, or their children’s  education funds. Additionally, due to Bank of America’s misleading  assurances, consumers deferred short-sales and passed on other attempts  to mitigate their losses. And they waited anxiously, month after month,  calling Bank of America and submitting their paperwork again and again,  not knowing whether or when they would lose their homes.”        
 Still, things like this only happen to losers who can’t keep up their  mortgage payments, right? Wrong. Recently Dana Milbank, the Washington  Post columnist, wrote about his own experience: a routine mortgage  refinance with Citibank somehow turned into a nightmare of misquoted  rates, improper interest charges, and frozen bank accounts. And all the  evidence suggests that Mr. Milbank’s experience wasn’t unusual.        
 Notice, by the way, that we’re not talking about the business practices  of fly-by-night operators; we’re talking about two of our three largest  financial companies, with roughly $2 trillion each in assets. Yet  politicians would have you believe that any attempt to get these abusive  banking giants to make modest restitution is a “shakedown.” The only  real question is whether the proposed settlement lets them off far too  lightly.        
 What about the argument that placing any demand on the banks would  endanger the recovery? There’s a lot to be said about that argument,  none of it good. But let me emphasize two points.        
 First, the proposed settlement only calls for loan modifications that  would produce a greater “net present value” than foreclosure — that is,  for offering deals that are in the interest of both homeowners and  investors. The outrageous truth is that in many cases banks are blocking  such mutually beneficial deals, so that they can continue to extract  fees. How could ending this highway robbery be bad for the economy?         
 Second, the biggest obstacle to recovery isn’t the financial condition  of major banks, which were bailed out once and are now profiting from  the widespread perception that they’ll be bailed out again if anything  goes wrong. It is, instead, the overhang of household debt combined with  paralysis in the housing market. Getting banks to clear up mortgage  debts — instead of stringing families along to extract a few more  dollars — would help, not hurt, the economy.        
 In the days and weeks ahead, we’ll see pro-banker politicians denounce  the proposed settlement, asserting that it’s all about defending the  rule of law. But what they’re actually defending is the exact opposite —  a system in which only the little people have to obey the law, while  the rich, and bankers especially, can cheat and defraud without  consequences.        
 
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