Interesting thesis by one Alan Farago in a CounterPunch piece: http://www.counterpunch.org/farago08022007.html
Is there a correlation between the growth of the MBS system of housing finance (including late innovations like CDOs)—and the growth rate of suburban sprawl, and declining quality of life for residents? Did the invention of MBSs cause sprawl to accelerate? Did CDOs?
The government-sponsored entities (Fannie and Freddie) began as programs to help people own homes, by supporting special financing programs. How did these institutions evolve into lakes of MBS junk protected by a moral hazard?
Did the absorption of junk MBSs by Fannie and Freddie contribute to suburban sprawl?
The relationship I am thinking of is market-distorting subsidies, and screwed up power relationships between finance corporations, land use planners and developers.
The structured debt debacle in housing markets is the reverse side of the costs of suburban sprawl.
The government-sponsored entities (Fannie and Freddie) began as programs to help people own homes, by supporting special financing programs. How did these institutions evolve into lakes of MBS junk protected by a moral hazard?
Did the absorption of junk MBSs by Fannie and Freddie contribute to suburban sprawl?
The relationship I am thinking of is market-distorting subsidies, and screwed up power relationships between finance corporations, land use planners and developers.
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