Credit Crisis Traps NYT Economics Scribe

By Kevin Spak,  Newser Staff
Posted May 16, 2009 6:55 PM CDT
Credit Crisis Traps NYT Economics Scribe
Edmund Andrews is waiting for his house of cards to fall apart.   (Shutterstock)

New York Times economics reporter Edmund Andrews was smart enough to avoid a financial disaster like the mortgage crisis. But “I had two utterly compelling reasons for taking the plunge,” he writes: “The money was there and I was in love.” With a new fiancée—and back-breaking alimony payments to his first wife—he bought a $460,000 home, using a “liar’s loan” mortgage, based on a fib about his salary.

“I am here to enable dreams,” a mortgage broker told him, saying it was up to Andrews to accept the risk. But he couldn’t. Shuttling all his cash into the mortgage, he racked up $50,000 in credit card debt. Then his wife lost her job. And late-night panic attacks ensued. Andrews applied for loan modification, but the bank was swamped. It simply had too many foreclosures to handle. “Eight months after my last payment, I am still waiting for the ax to fall.” (More New York Times stories.)

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