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The Housing Boom and Bust: Revised Edition

The Housing Boom and Bust: Revised EditionAuthor: Thomas Sowell
Publisher: Basic Books
Category: Book

List Price: $15.95
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Seller: BookShop4U
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 121 reviews
Sales Rank: 43245

Media: Paperback
Edition: First Trade Paper Edition
Pages: 256
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.1 x 0.8

ISBN: 0465019862
Dewey Decimal Number: 332.720973
EAN: 9780465019861
ASIN: 0465019862

Publication Date: February 23, 2010
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - The Housing Boom and Bust
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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Scary headlines and scarier statistics tell the story of a financial crisis on a scale not seen in decades—certainly not within the lifetime of most Americans. Moreover, this is a worldwide financial crisis. Financial institutions on both sides of the Atlantic have either collapsed or have been saved from collapse by government bailouts, as a result of buying securities based on American housing values that eroded or evaporated.

Now completely revised in paperback, The Housing Boom and Bust is designed to unravel the tangled threads of that story. It also attempts to determine whether what is being done to deal with the problem is more likely to make things better or worse.




Customer Reviews:
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4 out of 5 stars Worthy Read for General Understanding   September 3, 2010
T. D. Hobbs (Danville, KY)
Dr. Sowell outlines the economic and political events that lead to the Housing Boom and Bust as well as the demagoguery spewed from Washington, DC to the California coast. Rep. Barney Frank, Sen. Chris Dodd, and the Republican and Democratic establishments all had a role to play in the systemic failures created and caused by Fannie Mae and Freddy Mac. A quick read and well worth the time to gain a better understanding of what should have happened, what did happen, why it happened, and where we go from here.


5 out of 5 stars Know the real reasons why it happened   July 28, 2010
C. Lucas (USA)
Thomas Sowell does an excellent job spelling out how exactly the housing boom and bust happened. This book is well researched,full of facts, and presented in an easy to read manner.

It explores the economic and political reasons of why it happened. It give quotes of the key players before, during , and after the bubble. It can really open your eyes as to how something that was supposed to be good turned out to be very bad, with it's dire effects spreading everywhere even beyond the housing market. The ultimate theme being of why it is very unwise when 3rd parties-those who think they know better-try to tinker with the activities of business and everyday people in the hopes of making life more "fair".

If anyone wants to know the reasons for the housing mess, this book is a must read.



5 out of 5 stars Clarity   July 25, 2010
Neil McLeod (Sierra Vista, Arizona, US)
Thomas Sowell explains the current crisis clearly and in easily read layman's terms. It should be a must read for all Americans so we don't keep repeating these mistakes.


5 out of 5 stars Political Pressure: Creating a Housing Bust and Deep Recession   June 27, 2010
Thomas M. Loarie (Danville, CA USA)
Author, economist, and historian Thomas Sowell is always a must read for me. His "The Housing Boom and Bust" provides a thorough review of the economics of housing coupled with a history of housing booms and busts. This is a great book for those who want to understand what preceded and led to the housing bust of 2007/2008.

Sowell provides a detailed and apolitical review of the underlying systemic problems and the incentives for exploitation, as well as the key players, that led to the meltdown that we are still working our way through...and, possibly, will for several years to come.

Politics played a key role with the political mileage that comes with promoting home ownership. While there is plenty of blame to go around, accountability is lacking, with all involved pointing fingers to avoid blame.

The 2008 meltdown, while the worst in recent history, was not the first. Booms and busts have occurred over many years. Who in California remembers the busts of the early 80s and the early 90s? I do and suffered through both. This is a call for greater vigilance of our political system and those who have or have tried to insulate themselves from the consequences of their actions.



4 out of 5 stars It was a Mandate   May 23, 2010
Henry H. Bradley, Jr. (Seattle, WA United States)
Dr. Sowell's throrough analysis of the housing bubble is a reasoned antidote to the populist media descriptions of Senator Dodds' so-called Financial Reform Bill. Said media descriptions stereotype the financial firms of Wall Street as greedy loose cannons long overdue for calling to heel by a wise Government, and Dodds rises nobly to the occasion as he serves the last few months before an election in which his ethical record would prevent his return for another Senate term.

Sowell meticulously documents the genesis of the Government-mandated solution to the lack of housing ownership among low-income citizens. In a nutshell, it was the liberal solution to all perceived social problems, whereby an advocacy group perceives a societal flaw, announces its discovery, and insists that someone else shall now finance some solution to be provided by others, preferably with a new addition to the existing bureaucracy.

In the case of housing, this involved government muscle. The solution to that lack of ownership was that through legislation, bank A would be coerced into lending depositor B's money to client C (who might well not qualify for a large housing loan, by the standards of fiduciary responsibility for B's deposits), all at the urging and benefit of political party D, which certainly was happy to take the credit for this questionable but socially conscious use of B's dollars.

A stream of questionable mortgages, involving abnormally low down payments, was generated by this process. The government solved the problem of their high-risk saleability too, by mandating that the privately-owned Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac must purchase them on a quota system. They did so, and developed 'mortgage-backed' securities for sale worldwide, in which the poisoned instruments were mixed with normal ones. Bond-rating agencies curiously assigned those securities triple-A status, and the stage was set for a bubble, enhanced by the booming economy and low prime interest rates of the 1990s and early 2000s.

Fannie and Freddie became so successful at their purchase and sale of these poisoned mortgages that their business boomed and their politically-appointed executives were awarded spectacular bonuses, which they enhanced further by cooking their books. Banks and lending agencies, who would never have held such mortgages to term, cheerfully jumped into the scam with outrageously flimsy 'creative financing' schemes, and as long as housing prices continued to rise, risky mortgages became the foundation of vast fortunes among individual house-flippers and every sort of lender. Until arrived the peak and downturn of home prices, and then the crash of 2008, and the current government solution assigning the taxpayers the onerous chore of covering the losses.

Comes now Senator Dodd, whose bill shall wreak vengeance and more government intrusions and mandates against the crudely stereotyped Wall Street. All that's missing in this righteous bill is any mention whatever of Fannie and Freddie, now government-owned and hugely in the hole, the enablers of the whole boom and bust. Their losses continue unabated, on the taxpayers' tab.


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