Subprime Nation: American Power, Global Capital, and the Housing Bubble - Cornell Studies in Money Book | Financial Crisis Analysis, US Economy History, Real Estate Market Research - Perfect for Economists, Investors & Policy Makers
Subprime Nation: American Power, Global Capital, and the Housing Bubble - Cornell Studies in Money Book | Financial Crisis Analysis, US Economy History, Real Estate Market Research - Perfect for Economists, Investors & Policy Makers

Subprime Nation: American Power, Global Capital, and the Housing Bubble - Cornell Studies in Money Book | Financial Crisis Analysis, US Economy History, Real Estate Market Research - Perfect for Economists, Investors & Policy Makers

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Description

In his exceedingly timely and innovative look at the ramifications of the collapse of the U.S. housing market, Herman M. Schwartz makes the case that worldwide, U.S. growth and power over the last twenty years has depended in large part on domestic housing markets. Mortgage-based securities attracted a cascade of overseas capital into the U.S. economy. High levels of private home ownership, particularly in the United States and the United Kingdom, have helped pull in a disproportionately large share of world capital flows.As events since mid-2008 have made clear, mortgage lenders became ever more eager to extend housing loans, for the more mortgage packages they securitized, the higher their profits. As a result, they were dangerously inventive in creating new mortgage products, notably adjustable-rate and subprime mortgages, to attract new, mainly first-time, buyers into the housing market. However, mortgage-based instruments work only when confidence in the mortgage system is maintained. Regulatory failures in the U.S. S&L sector, the accounting crisis that led to the extinction of Arthur Andersen, and the subprime crisis that destroyed Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch and damaged many other big financial institutions have jeopardized a significant engine of economic growth. Schwartz concentrates on the impact of U.S. regulatory failure on the international economy. He argues that the "local" problem of the housing crisis carries substantial and ongoing risks for U.S. economic health, the continuing primacy of the U.S. dollar in international financial circles, and U.S. hegemony in the world system.

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
This book is so important that I feel compelled to knock a star off because the author made it so inaccessible. The book does a superb job of tracing the advantages that the growth of the housing industry, and its concomitant market in mortgage backed securities, brought to the United States for the 15 years before the housing bubble burst. American elites were able to turn the housing market (and growing house equity) into a differential growth advantage over the traditional nations of the advanced capitalist world that sucked in foreign capital and covered America's huge balance of trade deficits. It worked great, until one of the key "raw materials" of the process--viable home buyers--ran out. When the supply of credit-worthy home buyers ran out, the system reached for the only substitute available: highly leveraged lower income Americans whose wages were stagnant and job security nil. The results were, of course, disastrous.The author has much else to say, and my little synopsis hardly does the book justice. One hopes that its research and analysis transcends the tiny world of International Political Economy and finds itself absorbed in the broader discourse on the economic downturn of 2007-9.