IMF: Political Lobbying ~ Financial Risk

A new IMF analysis tests the common sense assertion that some mortgage lenders engaged in heavy political lobbying in the years prior to the financial crisis, and that the political results helped to precipitate the financial crisis (emphasis added):

On December 31, 2007, the Wall Street Journal reported that Ameriquest Mortgage and Countrywide Financial, two of the largest mortgage lenders in the nation, spent respectively $20.5 million and $8.7 million in political donations, campaign contributions, and lobbying activities from 2002 through 2006. The sought outcome, according to the article, was the defeat of anti-predatory lending legislation. In other words, timely regulatory response that could have mitigated reckless lending practices and the consequent rise in delinquencies and foreclosures was shut down by some mortgage lenders. Such anecdotal evidence suggests that the political influence of the financial industry contributed to the 2007 mortgage crisis, which, in the fall of 2008, generalized in the worst bout of financial instability since the Great Depression.

The researchers’ findings lend strong empirical support to the common sense:

Using detailed information on lobbying and mortgage lending activities, we find that lenders lobbying more on issues related to mortgage lending (i) had higher loan-to-income ratios, (ii) securitized more intensively, and (iii) had faster growing portfolios. Ex-post, delinquency rates are higher in areas where lobbyist’ lending grew faster and they experienced negative abnormal stock returns during key crisis events…These results show that lobbying lenders engage[d] in riskier lending.

URLs:

http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2009/wp09287.pdf