Category: Housing
By Anthony Gregory on Nov 13, 2009 in Bailouts, Economics, Housing, Politics, Presidential Power, Regulation, socialism | 18 Comments
George W. Bush is launching a free-market think tank. The Washington Times reports:
With the Obama administration establishing far-reaching controls in the auto, real estate and financial sectors, Mr. Bush said that “the role of government is not to create wealth, but to create the conditions that allow entrepreneurs and innovators to thrive.”
So the guy who [...]
By Randall Holcombe on Sep 7, 2009 in Books, Business, Economics, Housing, Land use, Money and Banking, Property Rights, Regulation, The State, Urban Issues, free market | 0 Comments
If you got to the Blog page by passing through the Independent Institute’s home page, I hope you noticed the announcement of the publication of Housing America: Building Out of a Crisis, which I co-edited with Benjamin Powell. Ben and I have been working on this project for years, so it is nice to see [...]
By David Beito on Jul 7, 2009 in American History, China, Civil Liberties, Housing, Imperialism, Latin America, Military, Personal Liberty, Surveillance, The State, War | 5 Comments
Bruce Bartlett just informed me of the sad news that my friend, and Independent Institute Research Fellow, Professor William Marina, died this morning of a heart attack. Bill was a fearless friend of the truth and his passing will be a great loss for us all.
I was first introduced to Bill about twenty [...]
By Mary Theroux on Jun 21, 2009 in Bailouts, Budget and Tax Policy, Civil Liberties, Constitution, Economics, Federal Reserve, Housing, Humor, Money and Banking, Politics, Presidential Power, Regulation, Surveillance, The State, Torture | 1 Comment
When my younger stepson Drake was in high school during the Clinton era, he took a class in graphic art at the California College of the Arts one summer, and one of his assignments was to create a propaganda poster. Drake took the photo of Elian Gonzalez being taken at gunpoint from his Miami relatives [...]
By Robert Higgs on Apr 18, 2009 in Economics, Federal Reserve, Housing, Money and Banking | 8 Comments
My old friends Jeffrey Rogers Hummel and David R. Henderson continue to argue that the Fed had little or nothing to do with fueling the housing bubble during the first five or six years of the present decade. Their latest article along these lines appears in Forbes. This is the third rendition of their argument [...]
By Robert Higgs on Feb 20, 2009 in Bailouts, Business, Economics, Federal Reserve, Housing, Money and Banking, Politics, The State | 8 Comments
For nearly a decade, Americans acted as though taking on more debt posed no problem. After all, they owned real estate, and all the experts told them that real-estate prices always go up. The mightiest magnates of finance acted as if they believed this stupid story—I say stupid because the merest child might easily have [...]
By David Theroux on Jan 22, 2009 in Bailouts, Budget and Tax Policy, Business, Housing, Money and Banking, Politics, Regulation, Urban Issues, Welfare | 3 Comments
In an insightful interview, Fannie Mae’s first Chief Credit Officer, Edward Pinto, corroborates our Research Fellow Stan Liebowitz’s Independent Policy Report, Anatomy of a Train Wreck: Causes of the Mortgage Meltdown. Interviewed by Chip Hanlon, President of Delta Global Advisors, Pinto discusses how the affordable housing/lending lobby chipped away at lending standards until there were [...]
By David Theroux on Jan 6, 2009 in American History, Business, Economics, Housing, Money and Banking, Nationalization, Politics, Regulation | 1 Comment
After many months of the “mainstream” media refusing to discuss the real causes of the sub-prime financial crisis, the deafening silence has finally been broken in a January 5th front-page article in the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) that begins to unmask the truth. In “Housing Push for Hispanics Spawns Wave of Foreclosures,” Susan Schmidt [...]
By Robert Higgs on Dec 25, 2008 in Bailouts, Economics, Employment, Great Depression, Housing, Money and Banking, Politics, The State | 3 Comments
It’s hardly a news flash that many people who are widely regarded as lions of the pro-market side have gone over to the dark side in recent months. I am not going to name any names; if you are one of the guilty parties, you know who you are; and the rest of us know, too, owing [...]
By Robert Higgs on Dec 19, 2008 in Bailouts, Business, Economics, Housing, Money and Banking, Politics, Regulation, The State | 2 Comments
I have just read an excellent report by Bill Stacey and Julian Morris called “How Not To Solve a Crisis,” which is being distributed by the Lion Rock Institute and the International Policy Network and reached me via the Wynnewood Institute. Although I do not endorse every element of this analysis, I recommend it highly because [...]