bellvei.cat

Collateral damage: Foreclosures and new mortgage lending in the 1930s

4.5 (648) · $ 19.00 · In stock

Although severe crises in housing markets contributed to both the Great Recession of 2007 and the Great Depression of the 1930s, the role that housing-related financial frictions played in the crises has yet to be explored. This column investigates the impact that foreclosures had on the supply of new home mortgage loans during the housing crisis of the 1930s. It shows that an increase in foreclosed real estate on a building and loan associations’ balance sheets had a powerful and negative effect on new mortgage lending during the 1930s.

Have Borrowers Recovered from Foreclosures during the Great Recession? - Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago

Mortgage rates over 7% are throttling homebuyer demand

JEH volume 80 issue 3 Cover and Front matter, The Journal of Economic History

The US Postal Savings System and the Collapse of B&L Associations

Consumer Bankruptcies, Foreclosures, Delinquencies, and Collections: Free Money Still Doing the Job

Subprime Auto-Loan Delinquencies, Which Had Exploded, Plunged after Stimmies. These Folks Are Now on Buyers' Strike

Multifamily Apartment Owner Foreclosed On 3,200 Units in Houston – MishTalk

Collateral damage: Foreclosures and new mortgage lending in the 1930s

Government Bailouts: A U.S. Tradition Dating to Hamilton - WSJ

Collateral Damage: The Impact of Foreclosures on New Home Mortgage Lending in the 1930s, The Journal of Economic History

Collateral Damage From Fed Policy (2) – A Broken Housing Market