Real Estate News and Advice
October 10, 2008
Learn the Art of the Short Sale Today's Insider REALTOR Secret


Search Realty Times
 



















NEED HELP?

Click for Live Support


Call: 214-353-6980







Housing a Path to Peace

What do home ownership and the war in Iraq have in common?

Plenty, says John Coursen, the 2003 chairman of the Mortgage Bankers Association and the lone civilian member of the President Bush's Middle East housing initiative.

"Home ownership is a path to peace," Coursen told the Pacific Northwest Mortgage Lenders Conference in Sun Valley, Ore., last month. "It can mean the same thing in other parts of the world as it does here at home."

The president of Central Pacific Mortgage in Folsom, Calif., Coursen said lenders in this country have a great opportunity in other countries and a responsibility to help them build their housing infrastructures.

"We've got plenty to do here at home," he told the conference, which was held in an idyllic setting that's in sharp contrast to the worn-torn Middle East. "But the industry also has a duty to look elsewhere to places where we can create a better standard of living."

In Iraq, it is not uncommon for 20-25 people to occupy 1,500 square-feet of living space, and not just in war-torn Baghdad.

"Iraq is a tremendously under-housed nation," said Coursen, who also is chairman of the California Housing Finance Agency. "Fifty percent of the population from the North to the South live jammed together."

At the same time, he added, "People in Iraq are getting up everyday to go to work, go to school, and to go shopping. They live in peril, but if they have that kind of commitment, we have to make that kind of commitment to them."

Coursen told the meeting that creating a system of home ownership and mortgages in the former dictatorship may not be as difficult as it seems.

A system of recorded land ownership is in place, thanks to Saddam Hussein, who gave government employees plots of land as a reward for their loyalty. And a real estate bank owned by the government was created by the now imprisoned dictator so land owners could build houses.

Despite Islamic law prohibiting such a thing, the bank can even charge interest, and borrowers can spend up to half their incomes on their home loans because Iraq allows no other debt.

"All of this is in place and operating with no technology and no written policies or procedures," Coursen noted.

In addition, in an effort to show that the transitional government is prepared to rebuild the country, the Bush Administration has earmarked $200 million to fund the Iraq Housing Fund under the Ministry of Government and Housing.

Published: August 17, 2005

Use of this article without permission is a violation of federal copyright laws.




When Lew Sichelman first started writing about housing in 1969, he was the youngest real estate writer in the country. Now, 37 years later, he's one of the oldest -- and most decorated.

He has been rated the top housing columnist in the country by the National Association of Realtors as well as by his peers in the National Association of Real Estate Editors. Indeed, NAREE has recognized his work on numerous occasions. One year - due to his advancing age, he can't recall which one - he earned top honors in the annual NAREE Journalism Contest in three out of the four major writing categories. It was the first time one writer has won so many NAREE awards in a single year.

Known for his ability to make even the most difficult topics understandable, Sichelman also has been honored by the National Association of Home Builders and the Mortgage Bankers Association.

He began providing in-depth coverage of and consumer-oriented information about housing and housing finance at the Washington Daily News, where he was real estate editor. He held that same position for nine more years at the Washington Star, which purchased the News in 1972.

The Star, a so-called "writer's newspaper" which also had the misfortune of being an evening paper, was put out of its misery in 1981, and Sichelman, who had begun self-syndicating his column in 1978, decided to become a full-time columnist. Today, his column, "The Housing Scene," is distributed by United Media to newspapers throughout the country.

He also is on the staff of National Mortgage News, an independent newspaper which is considered the bible of the mortgage business. And he writes for numerous other publications, including MarketWatch.com, where he answers readers questions once a week, Sports Illustrated (don't ask), RealtyTimes.com, BigBuilder and others.

Sichelman is married, the father of five and grandfather of eleven.







Real Estate News Network

You must enable Javascript to view the Video content and Navigation on this site.





Mortgage Rates
30 Year Fixed: 5.94%
15 Year Fixed: 5.63%
1 Year Adj: 5.15%
(U.S. Weekly Averages)

Today's Headlines

Exclusive Leads In Your Market







Agent Publicity | Market Conditions Interview | Local Market Conditions | Video Newsletter | Article Index | Terms & Conditions | Privacy | Contact Us

Copyright © 2005 Realty Times®. All Rights Reserved.