Thursday, February 11, 2010

Utah 5th highest foreclosure rate


Excerpts of Foreclosure mystery: Why can't conservative Utahns afford their mortgage?  Christian Science Monitor

Utah missed the big property run-ups in California and elsewhere, but it's No. 5 in foreclosures, according to a new RealtyTrac study.

During the housing bubble, they led the nation in bankruptcies. Now that the bubble is bust, they're among the top states in foreclosures. A RealtyTrac report released Thursday showed they had the fifth-highest foreclosure rate among the states nearly double the national rate and not far from No. 4 Florida's rate.

It's relatively straightforward why the housing bubble walloped Florida and the other Big Four foreclosure states (Nevada, Arizona, and California). Home prices there more than doubled since 2000 and people who stretched to buy those homes were pummeled when real estate values plummeted.

But Utah homes rose only half that much during the decade. What's going on in Utah?

"It's a lot of younger people who spent way, way beyond their means, absurd amounts of money trying to keep up with their folks," says one Utah resident who helps counsel financially troubled families at his church. They're "cool, nice, wonderful people, but an awful lot of them don't know how to spend money very wisely."

In mid-decade, when Utah was tops in bankruptcies, various commentators pinned the blame on Mormon religious and cultural practices, such as tithing, creating large families, buying homes at a young age, and as one critic put it: "the pressure in Mormonism to be, or at least appear, financially successful as proof the Lord is blessing them."

Indeed, Mormons in 2004 had a bankruptcy rate that was approaching twice that of the national average. But a 2007 study by two Harvard Law School graduates found that rates among non-Mormons in Utah were even higher.

Another research project pointed out that two-thirds of bankruptcy filers in Utah had at least one dependent child, twice the national average.

"Due to the large size of Utah families, it would invariably place Utah among the top 15 states in bankruptcy filings," writes Jerry Basford, professor of personal finance at the University of Utah, in an e-mail.

The study also pointed to the high number for repeat filers for bankruptcy and the effect of having a large proportion of young, middle-class people earning $30,000 to $60,000 a year as reasons for Utah's bankruptcy surge.

Having lots of young people in your population is a good thing for an economy unless, for whatever reason, they decide to buy homes they can't really afford.


Read the entire article here.

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