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WSWS : News
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: Britain
Britain: Liar loans drive hundreds of thousands
into debt
By Keith Lee
22 January 2008
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A recent report from the UK Citizens Advice Bureau (CAB) has
revealed that hundreds of thousands of people are being driven
into debt, end up in court and face the loss of their homes because
of irresponsible lending practices, bad advice and downright fraud.
For people who have longed to buy their own home their dream has
turned into a nightmare.
The report Set Up To Fail: CAB Clients experience of Mortgage
and Secured Loan Arrears Problems (December 2007) says mortgage
brokers are providing loanscalled appropriately liar
loans or self certification loansto people with poor
credit records and little or no financial acumen without
them having to provide proof of their incomes. Most people interviewed
in the report said they relied on the broker for advice and guidance
but many had not even been told the serious consequences of falling
behind with repayments.
The report is also highly critical of the regulatory authorities
and the Labour government, saying there are not enough safety
nets to protect vulnerable borrowers.
CAB Chief Executive David Harker said, The cavalier behaviour
of some brokers and sub-prime lenders is seriously undermining
home ownership and hitting the most vulnerable borrowers hardest.
Our research suggests that many aspiring homeowners have been
mis-sold unsuitable and costly home loans that are doomed to fail
from the start. Many sub-prime lenders are flouting the rules
on responsible lending by granting loans when its clear
the borrower will not be able to afford to repay it from the very
outset, then getting tough immediately things go wrong. Far from
providing housing security and a valuable asset, home ownership
has proved a fast track to debt and homelessness for many vulnerable
borrowers on low incomes.
According to the CAB report, which was based on 1,200 case
studies from 360 advice centres across the UK, the organisation
was involved in over 57,000 cases of mortgage and secured loan
arrears last year (2006-07), an 11 percent increase on the previous
year. Research suggested as many as 770,000 people had missed
at least one mortgage or secured loan payment in the previous
12 months.
The report shows how the majority of people coming into CAB
offices seeking mortgage advice have been rejected by the High
Street banks and mortgage lenders and are forced to take loans
from sub-prime lenders at much higher rates of interest. It reveals
that more than a third had household incomes below the UK
poverty line, one in five was reliant on means tested benefits,
and nearly 70 percent had outstanding unsecured debts averaging
£22,000.
More and more of peoples income is taken up with mortgage
repayments of one kind or another. For a third of all clients
interviewed in the CAB report, their combined mortgage and secured
loans payments were over half their income; for 12 percent of
interviewees their repayments were an unbelievable 70 percent
of their income.
One case study in the report involved a 47-year-old local authority
tenant living in Yorkshire who exercised the right to buy the
property where he was living. A broker persuaded him to say that
he was self-employed on the mortgage application form even though
he was in receipt of incapacity benefit and disability allowance
because of the severe mental health problems he suffered. Some
months after completion of the sale the mortgage interest rate
increased. Because he was unable to keep up repayments the lender
took court action for possession of his house, leaving him facing
homelessness and still in debt.
There has been a massive increase in the number of house repossessions
recently, with some economists saying levels are now close to
those seen when house prices slumped in the 1990s. The Council
of Mortgage Lenders reports that repossessions rose by 75 percent
last year to reach 30,000 and suggests this figure could reach
45,000 in 2008.
The CAB has also investigated the number of repossession cases
listed in 23 county courts in January 2007 and found that sub-prime
lenders were responsible for a huge number of themin
some cases the equivalent of ten times more than mainstream lenders.
It points out that although many borrowers do not turn up to court
thinking that they will automatically lose, the behaviour of the
lender is so bad that many judges are forced to side with the
customers.
The increasing difficulties facing homeowners is reflected
in the extraordinary growth of the debt collection industry. It
has quadrupled in size since 2003, from handling £8.6 billion
worth of debt to £22.7 billion now. One of the most disturbing
aspects highlighted by the report is the mushrooming of companies
that are like vultures waiting for their next meal, preying on
people who no longer have any solution to their debt problems
other than selling their house and renting it back.
The evidence suggests that homeowners in a financially
and emotionally vulnerable situation end up selling their houses
for much less than they are worth, in return for a tenancy that
offers little security of tenure. The state-run income support
mortgage interest scheme and private mortgage payment protection
insurance (MPPI) policies (held by one quarter of homeowners)
are supposed to help in such situations. However, the former is
woefully inadequate to protect those in greatest need of help
and insurance companies often find ways to avoid paying out the
latter.
A CAB office in south London, for example, reported how a woman
with mortgage arrears had been signed off work by her doctor because
of the stress involved in trying to keep up with the terms of
a court order suspending possession of her house. After her claim
on a MPPI policy was turned down she resorted to a sale and rent-back
company and signed an agreement without receiving any advice or
comparative quotes from the salesmen who visited her. While the
property was worth £350,000, she got only £200,000just
enough to pay off her mortgage and unsecured debts. Although she
also received a six-month £750-per-month tenancy agreement,
the landlord then wanted to put it up to £1,300 per month,
saying it had been incorrectly assessed. Shortly afterwards the
poor woman was back in court facing possession for rent arrears.
The report also quotes evidence from the housing charity Shelter
(http://england.shelter.org.uk/home/index.cfm)
about the increasing use of credit cards to pay mortgages or rent,
which has affected nearly 1 million people in the 12 months up
to October 2007.
Shelters chief executive Adam Sampson said, Clearly,
this is a huge problem which will only become more widespread
as housing costs continue to rise. We would urge anyone struggling
with the cost of their mortgage or rent to seek independent financial
advice. The number of people hit by the credit crunch, interest
rate hikes and unaffordable housing costs are rapidly rising.
For many people trying to keep a roof over their head,
desperation is driving them to short-term, high-cost borrowing.
Ordinary people are being forced to seek more risky and expensive
ways to stave off the threat of eviction and repossession,
he added.
The loans have been used to transfer wealth into the hands
of the ruling elite, and at the same time become a means of speculation.
Backed by the big banks and brokerage houses, mortgage companies
aggressively marketed home loans to households that in the past
would have never been approved for such loans. Home buyers were
assured that they were protected by rising home prices, which
would enable them, if they found themselves in economic straits,
to sell their properties and have more than enough money to pay
off their outstanding balances. With house prices falling throughout
the country this will no longer be the case and portends a social
disaster for many people in 2008. Auditors KPMG have predicted
that personal insolvencies in England and Wales will rise to more
than 130,000 from 109,615 in 2007.
See Also:
SEP candidate replies
to letter on housing crisis in Wales
[7 May 2007]
UK poverty report
draws attention to widening inequalities
[31 October 2005]
Labour policies make
London a haven for the super-rich
[23 April 2005]
Britain: families
depend on credit to survive
[22 June 2004]
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