'Consumer Protections' May Dominate Reforms

Congressional Democrats and Obama administration officials want to make consumer protection an integral part of any reforms to the mortgage finance system. Consumer protection needs to be at the "very heart of our system of mortgage finance, not an after-thought or relegated to second class status," said Michael Barr, counselor to the White House National Economic Council. Consumers and investors should be able to "rely on the fact that underwriting is being conducted appropriately," Mr. Barr told a mortgage reform forum sponsored by the Center for American Progress. Meanwhile, the Mortgage Bankers Association is working on reform proposals to restore confidence in the system by establishing more effective consumer protections. "We know that these proposals will constrain some in the industry, but they will also help our members and their customers in the long-run," MBA chairman David Kittle told a congressional panel last week.

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