Mortgage arrears: A slowing of the worsening?

The latest arrears data are out (pdf), and the rate of increase has slowed markedly at either ‘end’ of the arrears process. I think this dynamic is worth exploring.

Could this slowing of the worsening represent a sort of ‘lump’ of boom-related arrears, relatively fixed in quantum, that policy makers have to deal with? Or, are we merely seeing a slowdown before another ramping up of the arrears process?

From the release:

The figures for Q4 show a continuation of the divergent trends in early arrears and longer-term arrears. There was a quarter-on-quarter decline of 1.3 per cent in the number of early arrears cases during the fourth quarter of the year. The number of PDH mortgage accounts in arrears of less than 90 days was 49,363 at end-December, or 6.2 per cent of the total stock. However, the number of accounts in arrears of over 360 days increased by 9.1 per cent during Q4. At end-December 2012, 51,352 PDH accounts, or 6.5 per cent of the total stock, were in arrears of over 360 days. Just under half of these were in arrears of more than 720 days. The outstanding balance on these PDH accounts in arrears over 720 days was    €4.8 billion at end-December, equivalent to 4.3 per cent of the total outstanding balance on all PDH mortgage accounts.

Taking A Step Back

Ashoka Mody advocates a “rest stop for Europe” in this opinion piece.

Methinks they do protest too much

It isn’t Paul Krugman’s fault that the European Commission has been busily defending a macroeconomic policy mix that is doing tremendous damage to the European periphery: the EC only has itself to blame on this one. And so the latest outraged tweets emerging from the Brussels bubble are a little hard to take.

One of the tragedies of the interwar period is that the good guys — liberal internationalists — tended to support a macroeconomic policy mix that was destructive, as a result of their support for the gold standard. In so doing they helped undermine the case for liberal internationalism. It would be helpful if the cocooned elites in Brussels remembered that they are, de facto, the public face of the European project, and that when they defend the indefensible they are in their turn undermining that project.

Doubts cast on Icelandic crisis model

This is an interesting FT article on the lessons from the Icelandic case here.

Ireland: poster child for austerity

James Mackintosh has an extensive article on the FT website here.