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» Moderator  |  Richard K. Green  consumer loans; they are involved in the student loans, mortgage loans
 But do you see evidence that it's been much of a problem?  and so on, but in any case, I don't think the government ever directly got
               involved in the lending process itself. I'm not 100% sure, but as far as I
               know, it's very rare that the government becomes a direct lender to any
 » Panelist  |  Min Hwang  of those loans. I think part of the reason is it cannot be guaranteed that
 No, I mean if every prepayment is about seven years, you don't even   the government is going to be an effective lender, in terms of securing the
 get to the ten-year period. Forward MBS is usually about five to seven   funds, in terms of underwriting the loans, and evaluate the borrowers.
 years for the prepayment, so they're pretty similar actually.   I mean, it's not the job for the government, right? Governments should
               have some policy goals to help certain groups of borrowers, and let the
               market help those people, and give the incentive to private market to
 » Moderator  |  Richard K. Green  provide those opportunities to those borrowers. So I think it's preferable
 Oh, Tyler, you want to follow up on that?  for the government to help the private market to supply those credits,
               instead of directly involved in lending.


 » Panelist  |  Tyler T. Yang                                                        Session III
 Chairman and CEO, Integrated Financial Engineering, Inc   » Moderator  |  Richard K. Green
                 Okay, I think we should continue that discussion, because I think it's a
 Yeah, I was doing the actuarial review for the HECM program for the   really interesting point. But let's turn it over to Tyler. Probably he has been
 last several years, and we did one particular analysis looking at regressing   more in the weeds on the US HECM program than anybody else in the
 the termination due to the death versus the national mortality rate, and   whole country. So Tyler Yang, please tell us the issues with reverse mortgages.
 we found HECM death rate is about 90 percent of the national mortality
 rate. So it's kind of indirect evidence that there's some self-selection
 happening in that.  » Presenter  |  Tyler T. Yang
                 Okay, thank you Richard. Actually my slides will probably answer part
               of the second question a little bit. So I'm teaching the real estate finance
 » Moderator  |  Richard K. Green  capital market course in John Hopkins University now, and the one first
 All right, and I'm going to put up this audience question. I have it on   lesson I give my students is that although the US has probably the longest
 my screen, there we go. So both the US and South Korean governments   housing finance system available in the world, it is not flawless. Over the
 do not directly supply reverse mortgages but through banks. What do   years, we just learned one thing, which is that there is no perfect solution
 you think about the government's direct supply of reverse mortgages in   that solves all the problems. In the US, for the last eighty years since
 Korea, particularly basically at a subsidized interest rate?  the establishment of the FHA, we've seen the US financial system has
               evolved several times and wherever there is a crisis, they fix the program
               to fix that situation and then life is good for a few years, and then the
 » Panelist  |  Min Hwang  next crisis hits. So we see that continuously evolves and even nowadays
 I think I actually know who asked this question. Let me explain the   there's still no evidence that we have solved all the problems. We just wait
 case of the US first. In the US, the government is actually involved a lot in   for the next crisis to hit.




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