Hamlet
Elite Member
- Joined
- Aug 14, 2006
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- Ohio
I theory, regulations do not remove or prevent wrongdoing. Laws against murder do not prevent or remove all murder.
In almost all cases, preventing those with interests in the outcome from ordering appraisals would preclude everyone except judges, mediators - and AMC's - from odering appraisals. Think about the consequences of that. Just as AMC's have arisen to fill the need of having disinterested parties order appraisals, the AMC's would become the brokers of all appraisal transactions because the buyer or seller, the trustee of an estate, a comdemnor or condemnee, the tax assessors office and the individual complainant - interested parties all - would all be precluded from ordering appraisals.
This keeps crossing my mind, but I never posted it. Put yourself in the shoes of a legislature. Who is it going to appear to be the ones who can't be trusted? If appraisers would do their job and just say no to htting numbers, then no one would be lobbying anyone to "fix" it.
Steve, I agree with what you are saying, but murders are mentally ill. Robbers are driven by greed. It is more difficult to deter someone who is driven by demons rather than someone who understands and fears the consequences of their actions.
If greed is the motivating factor for those that would steal, then penalizing them monetarily would be a deterrent. One way to do this is to require the lenders to hold those loans in house for a period of time before they are able to bundle and sell. The lenders have to be made to care about the quality of their loans. Not being able to pass off, or write off bad loans would be a start.
Waiting for unethical people to just say no voluntarily is no more realistic than expecting laws to abolish all crime.