I bought a house last year with 3% down plus closing costs. The fact that housing prices went down probably 40% in my area is the only way I could afford a house. My mortgage of $1200 will be easily maintanable so long as my income stays about the same, or maybe a little lower.
It seems the problem is not people not being able to afford their house, but people being so massively flipped. The person I bought the house from bought it in 2006 at the height of the boom at $265k. I don't think she was behind in the mortgage, but was moving out of the country. What is she supposed to do? People buy and sell their homes for many purposes. It's not her fault that she just so happened to buy at the top. You would think that after 5 years of paying a mortgage, you would at least be able to break even after selling expenses. But after I bought it for $150k, she was probably at least $50k flipped.
If the powers that be hadn't pushed prices so high, there wouldn't be so many short sales.
It seems the problem is not people not being able to afford their house, but people being so massively flipped. The person I bought the house from bought it in 2006 at the height of the boom at $265k. I don't think she was behind in the mortgage, but was moving out of the country. What is she supposed to do? People buy and sell their homes for many purposes. It's not her fault that she just so happened to buy at the top. You would think that after 5 years of paying a mortgage, you would at least be able to break even after selling expenses. But after I bought it for $150k, she was probably at least $50k flipped.
If the powers that be hadn't pushed prices so high, there wouldn't be so many short sales.