preview

The Life Of Reason By George Santayana

Good Essays

Here’s an experiment for you. Ask the next 10 people you meet about what comes to mind when they think of the word “disaster.” I did, and you’ll probably get answers similar to the ones that I received: war, hurricane, earthquake, etc. Not a single person got anywhere close to “housing crisis,” and unless you work at a mortgage lender or economic think tank, you’re probably not going to get that answer either. This is despite the fact that anybody on the receiving end of that question has probably not experienced a severe earthquake or hurricane, yet has felt the impact of the 2008 housing bubble simply by being a participant in the economy.
In “The Life of Reason,” novelist George Santayana wrote the now-famous phrase, “those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” That holds true for housing crises, specifically the one in 2008. Less than a decade after the world economy nearly collapsed, the vast majority of us still don’t understand what happened or why it happened. Some of us do know, but choose not to care. Both are equally dangerous.
Housing crises are avoidable. They are borne out of lapses in judgment from three main groups: lenders that do not make responsible lending decisions, buyers that do not make responsible buying decisions, and governments that do not make responsible legislation to govern either of the former parties. Each of them needs to be addressed in order to avoid repeating a sordid, destructive past.

BANKS: MANAGE RISK
Lenders,

Get Access