The Housing Boom and Bust
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Cover of the hardcover edition | |
| Author | Thomas Sowell |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Subjects | United States housing bubble, Subprime mortgage crisis |
| Publisher | Basic Books |
Publication date | April 24, 2009 (1st edition) February 23, 2010 (revised edition) |
| Publication place | United States |
| Media type | Print (Hardcover and Paperback) |
| Pages | 192 (1st edition) 233 (revised edition) |
| ISBN | 978-0-465-01880-2 |
| Followed by | Intellectuals and Society |
The Housing Boom and Bust is a non-fiction book written by Thomas Sowell about the United States housing bubble and following subprime mortgage crisis. The book was initially published on April 24, 2009, by Basic Books and reissued on February 23, 2010.
Sowell, a Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, explores political and economic causes of the American housing crisis. For example, he links the Community Reinvestment Act to decreased lending standards that resulted in an increase of subprime mortgages, as the law forced banks to set up quotas of lending to minorities. As a result, "lenders had to resort to 'innovative or flexible' standards."[1]
He also contrasts housing prices for modest middle-class homes in California and Texas and theorizes that California, with open space and various other zoning laws, had homes that were more expensive than those of similar size in Texas, which lacks such laws. Politically, Sowell targets the George W. Bush administration and Congress members of both major political parties for obstructing audits of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and enabling banks to make highly risky housing loans. Regarding housing prices, Reason magazine summarized his stance: "the immense local variability in housing prices and failed loans reveals that the government mistook a set of local problems for a national one."[2]