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  • Plato
    Rhetoric is the art of ruling the minds of men.

« Hopkinton’s decision not to buy Weston Nurseries 708 acres could lead to . . . well . . . anything. | Main | Town must reach merits of 40B application before determining local need »

June 22, 2007

Regulating Understanding: Can new loan disclosures solve the subprime woes?

As anyone who recently borrowed money to buy a house or refinanced their mortgage can tell you, the stack of paperwork required by the banks is staggering. The “closing package” is so complete (and I use that term loosely), even the loan processors rarely understand what it all means. How then can regulators insure that borrowers understand the trouble they are getting into?

The Federal Trade Commission has determined that the current disclosure forms for consumer loans don’t get the job done, and that better forms would better inform the consumer. See the June 13 FTC report here.

The unfortunate reality is that banks and mortgage companies never REPLACE anything, they only ADD to what is already there. Old, outdated and stale paperwork is commonly required. When informed of the superfluous nature of their documents, the reaction is usually the overused refrain – it’s the lawyers fault.

[Read more in the Boston.com Blog]

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