March 16, 2017
Trump, Homelessness and the General Welfare
The Hill published my column, Trump’s Budget Proposal Is Bad News for Housing Across the Nation. It opens,
The White House unveiled its much anticipated budget proposal today. It shows deep cuts to important agencies, including a more than $6 billion decrease in funding to the U.S Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). More than 75 percent of the agency’s budget goes to helping families pay their rent. Thus, these cuts would have a negative impact on thousands upon thousands of poor and working class households.
Many years ago, Congress enshrined the “goal of a decent home and a suitable living environment for every American family” within its Declaration of National Housing Policy. This goal was not just justified by the basic needs of those with inadequate housing, but also because “the general welfare and security of the nation” required it. As our nation’s leading cities grapple with rapidly growing homeless populations, this additional justification takes on added weight today.
Click here to read the rest of it.
March 16, 2017 | Permalink | No Comments
Thursday’s Advocacy & Think Tank Roundup
- A study by the Institute for Children, Poverty and Homelessness finds that New York City’s homeless high school students are more likely to face an array of health risks than their non-homeless counterparts.
- Boston Mayor Martin J. Walsh has made affordable housing a priority for his administration and has set a goal of creating 6,500 new affordable units by 2030. However, uncertainty in the Housing Credit market has affected the value of the credit, which could hinder cities and states in creating more housing for low-income residents.
- Citing an example from Des Moines, Iowa, an article by The Associated Press examines how the redevelopment of industrial districts often displaces light industrial businesses and warehouses.
March 16, 2017 | Permalink | No Comments
March 15, 2017
Fannie and Freddie’s Credit Risk Transfers
The Urban Institute’s Housing Finance Policy Center has released its February 2017 Housing Finance at a Glance Chartbook, always a great resource for housing geeks. Each Chartbook highlights one topic. This one focuses on GSE credit risk transfers, an important but technical subject:
March 15, 2017 | Permalink | No Comments
Wednesday’s Academic Roundup
- This paper, ‘Monopoly’ in Real Life – The Housing Market and Inequality, uses a simple model based on the board game Monopoly to simulate the drivers of house prices and inequality. The starting capital, income per round (wage), rental income, rental costs and the timing of home ownership all matter for the evolution of house prices and inequality.
- This paper, Market Thickness and the Impact of Unemployment on Housing Market Outcomes, develops a search-matching model to study the impact of the unemployment rate on the housing market in the presence of the thick market effect. We estimate the structural model using Texas city-level data that covers three years, 1990, 2000 and 2010.
- This study, Nowhere to Go but Up: A Study of Listed Real Estate Sensitivity to Changes in Interest Rates, re-examines the sensitivity of global listed real estate markets to changes in market and Central Bank interest rates with respect to both their returns and volatility. Specifically the paper considers the recent period of relaxing monetary policies in the countries with the largest global listed real estate markets.
- In the wake of the financial crisis, mortgage lending to lower-income and minority borrowers overcorrected and has not recovered. This paper, Has the Mortgage Pendulum Swung Too Far? Reviving Access to Mortgage Credit, while homeownership is a riskier investment than previously realized, still it remains a proven path to increased wealth on balance for lower-income households.
March 15, 2017 | Permalink | No Comments
March 14, 2017
Gorsuch and the State of Administrative Law
I was interviewed by Harold O’Grady on his podcast for the BLS Library Blog about Supreme Court nominee Judge Gorsuch:
This conversation with Brooklyn Law School Professor David Reiss focuses on his recent article Gorsuch, CFPB and Future of the Administrative State. Prof. Reiss talks about the impact that U.S. Supreme Court nominee Judge Neil Gorsuch would have on the future of administrative law and, in particular, on federal consumer protection enforcement if he is confirmed. Prof. Reiss reviews the case PHH v. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau which the United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit decided last year. It is likely the case will be appealed to the Supreme Court. If so, Justice Gorsuch may vote to curtail the independence of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and limit its enforcement powers. More generally, Prof. Reiss believes that, given previous rulings by Judge Gorsuch in cases dealing with administrative law, a Justice Gorsuch will be a skeptic of agency action and will support greater judicial review of agency actions.
You can find the link to our conversation here.
March 14, 2017 | Permalink | No Comments
Tuesday’s Regulatory & Legislative Roundup
- The Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta announced Monday that it selected Raphael Bostic to serve as its new president and chief executive officer, replacing Dennis Lockhart, who retired from the Atlanta Fed at the end of February. Bostic’s appointment at the Atlanta Fed takes effect on June 5, 2017.
- The Vice Chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. just unveiled a proposal to regulate banks in a way he feels will be superior to current Dodd-Frank financial reform. Speaking at the Institute of International Bankers Annual Washington Conference, Thomas Hoenig said that while Dodd-Frank is well intended, the regulations are too burdensome for all banks, “especially smaller banks.”
- President Donald Trump held a listening session Thursday to talk to leaders of community banks. In the session, also attended by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Gary Cohn, head of the National Economics Council, Trump promised lenders that soon they would be safe to loan and create jobs, according to an article by Renae Merle for The Washington Post.
- The three credit rating agencies will soon exclude tax liens and civil judgments from credit reports for many people, according to the The Wall Street Journal. Equifax, Experian and TransUnion will remove the tax-lien and civil-judgment data starting around July 1, helping omit negative information from the financial scorecards, the article noted.
March 14, 2017 | Permalink | No Comments



