大衰退后的抵押贷款修改:新证据和政策含义

Diana Farrell, Kanav Bhagat, Peter Ganong, P. Noel
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引用次数: 21

摘要

在大萧条之后,各种抵押贷款修改计划被引入,以帮助房主努力使他们的每月抵押贷款支付留在他们的房子里。我们使用个人借款人层面的抵押贷款数据,结合信用卡支出和存款账户数据,来调查每月抵押贷款支付和长期抵押贷款债务在违约和消费方面变化的相对重要性。我们首先量化了这些修改计划提供的付款减少的变化,然后使用计划接受者所经历的付款和本金减少的变化来估计付款和本金减少对违约和消费的影响。首先,我们发现,在不同的修改方案中,还款负担相似的借款人的还款减少幅度相差两到三倍。与GSE计划相比,高抵押贷款付款与收入(PTI)比率的借款人从HAMP获得的付款减少超过两倍。与HAMP相比,抵押贷款PTI比率低的借款人从GSE计划中获得的付款减少是HAMP的三倍。其次,减少10%的抵押贷款支付减少了22%的违约率。第三,对于资不抵债的借款人来说,减少抵押贷款本金对违约没有影响。这表明,“战略性违约”并不是这些资不抵债借款人做出违约决定的主要驱动因素。第四,对于仍然资不抵债的借款人,抵押贷款本金的减少对消费没有影响。最后,无论债务收入比或房屋净值如何,违约都与收入损失相关。抵押贷款违约紧随其后的是收入大幅下降。无论修改前抵押贷款PTI或贷款价值比如何,这种模式都成立,这表明触发违约的是收入冲击,而不是高支付负担或负房屋净值。这些发现表明,抵押贷款修改计划的目的是大幅减少支付将最有效地降低抵押贷款违约率。旨在达到基于债务收入比指标的负担能力目标的修改计划,而不考虑付款减少或目标特定的LTV比率,同时使借款人资不抵债,可能在减少违约方面效果较差。此外,帮助借款人建立和维持适当的现金缓冲以抵消收入冲击的政策可能是防止抵押贷款违约的有效工具。高抵押贷款PTI和低抵押贷款PTI借款人在违约前都经历了类似的收入下降,这表明即使在那些“负担不起”抵押贷款的借款人中,也是收入下降而不是高水平的支付负担引发了违约。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Mortgage Modifications after the Great Recession: New Evidence and Implications for Policy
In the aftermath of the Great Recession, various mortgage modification programs were introduced to help homeowners struggling to make their monthly mortgage payments remain in their homes. We use mortgage data at the individual borrower level, joined to credit card spending and deposit account data, to investigate the relative importance of changes in monthly mortgage payments and long-term mortgage debt on default and consumption. We first quantify the variation in payment reduction offered by these modification programs and then use the variation in payment and principal reduction experienced by program recipients to estimate the impact of payment and principal reduction on default and consumption. First, we find that payment reduction for borrowers with similar payment burdens varied by two to three times across different modification programs. Borrowers with a high mortgage payment to- income (PTI) ratio received more than twice the payment reduction from HAMP compared to the GSE program. Borrowers with a low mortgage PTI ratio received three times the payment reduction from the GSE program compared to HAMP. Second, a 10 percent mortgage payment reduction reduced default rates by 22 percent. Third, for borrowers who remained underwater, mortgage principal reduction had no effect on default. This suggests that “strategic default” was not the primary driver of default decisions for these underwater borrowers. Fourth, for borrowers who remained underwater, mortgage principal reduction had no effect on consumption. Finally, default was correlated with income loss, regardless of debt-to-income ratio or home equity. Mortgage default closely followed a substantial drop in income. This pattern held regardless of pre-modification mortgage PTI or loan-to-value ratio, suggesting that it was an income shock rather than a high payment burden or negative home equity that triggered default. These findings suggest that mortgage modification programs that are designed to target substantial payment reduction will be most effective at reducing mortgage default rates. Modification programs designed to reach affordability targets based on debt-to-income measures without regard to payment reduction or target a specific LTV ratio while leaving borrowers underwater may be less effective at reducing defaults. Furthermore, policies that help borrowers establish and maintain a suitable cash buffer that can be used to offset an income shock could be an effective tool to prevent mortgage default. Both high and low mortgage PTI borrowers experienced a similar income drop just prior to default, suggesting that even among those borrowers with “unaffordable” mortgages, it was a drop in income rather than a high level of payment burden that triggered default.
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