Americans are up to their necks in debt.
With credit cards, student loans, car loans and mortgages, the
nation owes roughly $2.4 trillion as of July 2007, according to the
Federal Reserve. The nation’s media were there to cover almost every
drop of red ink.
Low interest rates helped drive a
national real estate boom that began in 2000 and led to record home
ownership by 2004. Many people borrowed for “dream” homes, second
homes or flipped homes as speculative investments. But rising
defaults have prompted bailout plans from both Democrats and
Republicans in Congress.
“I think a lot of the lenders have
really taken advantage of what is a really tough economic situation
for many Americans,” said Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.) in an Aug.
7, 2007, CNBC interview. The presidential candidate said she plans
to increase regulation of the industry and “set up a $1 billion
federal fund to help homeowners avoid foreclosure.”
Another presidential candidate, Sen.
Barack Obama (D-Ill.) also blamed
“predatory lenders” and has said
they should be fined and further regulated, in the Aug. 28, 2007,
Financial Times.
The House of Representatives passed an
expansion plan Sept. 18, 2007, that would give the Federal Housing
Administration (FHA) the ability to guarantee loans for more than
200,000 additional homeowners, according to the
Associated Press.
President George Bush declared on August 31 that “government has got
a role to play” in helping homeowners avoid default.
But even with the subprime problems,
home ownership for the second quarter of 2007 was still at 68.2
percent, only a percentage point lower than the record set in 2004.
Though media coverage on ABC “World News with Charles Gibson,” “NBC
Nightly News” and “CBS Evening News” in 2006 and 2007 certainly made
the situation sound dire – as if every American was about to lose
his home.
When thousands of borrowers started
defaulting on mortgages, the networks attacked lenders, ignored the
responsibilities of consumers for their own debts and made it appear
that the American dream itself was coming to an end.
“We call it the American nightmare,”
homeowner Amy Wood told ABC “World News with Charles Gibson” on
March 26. That phrase summed up more than nine months of network
coverage of debt.
That story about rising foreclosures in
Concord, N.C., attacked lenders and virtually ignored the idea that
borrowers might have some personal responsibility for their own
mistakes. It was the first part of a series ABC entitled “The Home
Wreckers.”
Anchor Charles Gibson blamed lenders’
“creative financing” and reporter Steve Osunsami claimed homeowners
were “talked into purchasing” homes with “little or no money down”
and low interest rates.
“Their American dream is over,”
Charlotte Observer reporter Binyamin Appelbaum told ABC’s “World
News with Charles Gibson.” That was a common theme for the network,
which blamed lenders four times as often as borrowers (20 to 5) for
debt and ignored the issue of personal responsibility in two-thirds
of its stories.
Another family struggling to avoid
foreclosure – the Tingley's – were presented in the same segment as
victims of evil lenders. Osunsami explained that the couple had seen
their mortgage payment increase by 20 percent over the builder’s
low-end estimate of $726.68 per month.
But Osunsami didn’t question the
Tingley's assumption that they would be able to pay the lowest
estimate forever. He never said they put themselves in debt and
assumed they would have no trouble selling the house five years
later.
This gloomy, anti-business,
anti-personal responsibility story was the tip of the iceberg. BMI
and CMI found news shows consistently ignored the responsibility of
borrowers and turned them into helpless victims of circumstance.
That left only one villain – business. Reporters blamed “deceptive”
lenders and businesses for the failings of those who borrowed the
money.
The analysis covered an ideal time for
spending – from Nov. 28, 2006, (Black Friday, the start of the
holiday shopping season) to Aug. 31, 2007. Out of 156 stories and
briefs on the evening newscasts of ABC, CBS and NBC, researchers
found that 114 had a personal responsibility angle, and of those 62
percent (71) ignored the issue. Sixty-two percent of the total
stories (97) presented borrowers as victims. Businesses were also
six times more likely to be blamed for debt than consumers.
While the news media pointed fingers at
business, industry experts were willing to share the burden for
mortgage problems. Harry Dinham, former president of the National
Association of Mortgage Brokers, said in the Oct. 4, 2007, Newsday,
“We’re getting a lot of the blame [for the subprime ‘crisis’], but
there are a lot more players here … Everybody played a part in
what’s taken place.”
Every American who takes out a loan or
applies for a credit card makes the decision to borrow. But you’d
never know it from watching the networks cover issues of personal
finance.
This was most obvious in reporters’
attempts to explain “subprime” mortgages. On the Aug. 10, 2007,
broadcast of “NBC Nightly News,” reporter Maria Bartiromo, who
generally does a fair job in reporting finance matters, succumbed to
the temptation to sugar coat the personal responsibility angle: “…
subprime mortgages are mortgages given to people with
under-the-radar credit histories, poor credit basically.”
Reporter Armen Keteyian did a story on
an alleged mortgage scam in Maryland during the July 13, 2007, “CBS
Evening News.” Again, the missing element was personal
responsibility. This time the glaring omission came from the expert
Keteyian used in the story, Elizabeth Renuart from the liberal
National Consumer Law Center. She said, “financial distress is the
weakness that they exploit, because people are so concerned about
losing their homes, they’ll do almost anything to save them.”
Both stories highlighted the failure of
the news media to lay responsibility for debt problems at the feet
of the consumers themselves. In stories where there was a personal
responsibility angle, 71 out of 114, or 62 percent blamed someone
else for the consumer’s financial problems. It didn’t matter whether
the story was on consumer debt, retirement, student loan debt, or
subprime mortgages and foreclosures; all three networks were
reluctant to point the finger at the true culprits.
Night after night, people were “lured”
into bad loans, families were “left in a lurch” when their
adjustable-rate mortgages adjusted, and retirees who never bothered
to save for retirement now “have to” keep working to pay their
bills.
ABC and NBC did the poorest job.
Two-thirds of the stories involving issues of personal
responsibility stories ignored the concept (66 percent, ABC 22/33;
NBC 26/39). CBS did better, but still ignored personal
responsibility 54 percent (23/42) of the time.
Perhaps the most striking example of
anti-personal-responsibility reporting on the debt issue was a
series ABC “World News with Charles Gibson” ran in March 2007 called
“The Home Wreckers.” Here’s how anchor Gibson teased the story at
the top of the March 26 broadcast:
“The Home Wreckers. Locking families out of the American
dream by offering mortgages too good to be true.”
Later in the broadcast he pitched the story again:
“And when we come back, the easy home loans leading more
American families down the path of financial ruin. Is there any
way out?”
The two-night series never addressed the
responsibility of the homeowners who decided to take advantage of
“easy financing.” Instead, reporters depicted homeowners as victims
“talked into” purchasing their properties. The second night of “The
Home Wreckers” series featured a favorite liberal theme, government
intervention, by profiling the efforts being made by the city of
Chicago to rescue homeowners with mortgage problems.
On July 12, 2007, “NBC Nightly News”
profiled a town in California where foreclosures had hit hard.
Reporter George Lewis set up the story with the line, “Too many
people with variable-rate mortgages obtained when interest rates
were rock bottom now find themselves in a bind, unable to meet
rapidly rising house payments.” Lewis went on in his report to say,
“Some critics blame unscrupulous lenders for pushing people with
shaky credit into mortgages they now cannot afford.”
No consideration was given to the fact
that these borrowers chose to take the loans and whether they
researched what their payments would be in the future. Instead, to
further downplay the personal responsibility of the borrowers, Lewis
used a sound bite from a Los Angeles city councilman, who said,
“It’s too tempting for someone to try and get these lower rates,
thinking that they could be a part of the American dream and not
anticipate what problems can occur in the future.”
While CBS did a slightly better job
addressing personal responsibility, the network still ignored the
topic in more than half of its stories. In a July 11, 2007, story
about fees banks charge on overdrawn accounts, business
correspondent Anthony Mason featured a college student surprised by
her bank statement. The woman had been charged for overdrawing her
account. Her response? “I think they’re sucking money out of the
consumers.” The woman was never held accountable for the fact that
she spent more than she had in her account.
Unlike the network evening news shows,
financial experts, including some who appeared on TV, touted
personal responsibility. Dave Ramsey, a financial planner and
author, is a frequent contributor to CBS’s “The Early Show.” On the
April 3, 2007, broadcast of that program, Ramsey was interviewed by
anchor Russ Mitchell about subprime mortgages. Ramsey’s comments
drummed the personal responsibility beat again and again.
“You ought to kind of have a clue in your own life. If you’re
behind in your bills, you have no money, your income is not
great, you’re probably not getting the best mortgage.”
“Pay your bills on time or early for a couple of years. You
are then ready in your own heart, in your own character, plus
your credit, to purchase a home.”
“… being on the b-word, the budget. Living on less than you
make, having a goal and saying, I don’t have to do this today.
It could be a two-year goal to buy a home….It’s OK to rent for a
little while, while you get your act together.”
Producers and reporters choose the
experts they include in their stories. Clearly there are people in
the field, like Dave Ramsey, who bring the message of accountability
and responsibility to a story. The inclusion of this point of view
provides more balance but doesn’t fit into the networks’ “blame
business” mentality.
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Executive Summary
