Home mortgages have loomed continually larger in the financial situation of American households. In 1949, mortgage debt was equal to 20 percent of total household income; by 1979, it had risen to 46 percent of income; by 2001, 73 percent of income (Bernstein, Boushey and Mishel, 2003). Similarly, mortgage debt was 15 percent of household assets in 1949, but rose to 28 percent of household assets by 1979 and 41 percent of household assets by 2001. This enormous growth of American home mortgages, as shown in Figure 1 (as a percentage of GDP), has been accompanied by a transformation in their form such that American mortgages are now distinctively different from mortgages in the rest of the world. In addition, the growth in mortgage debt outst...
American Housing Financing Attempt at a Comparative Study Within a single generation, American ...
In the aftermath of the financial crisis, major reforms of the U.S. housing finance system are likel...
This study is structured around two objectives: surveying the 180 years ’ evolution of the US mortga...
The American Mortgage in Historical and International Context Home mortgages have loomed continually...
Home mortgages have loomed continually larger in the financial situation of American households. In ...
We show that the determinants of mortgage borrowing and other forms of consumer credit differ: borro...
Recent research has emphasized the negative effects of finance on macroeconomic performance and even...
Between 1880 and 1929, urban residential mortgage loans became widely available in the United States...
“The Ownership Society” examines the residential mortgage system in the United States from the 1960s...
Since the mid-1980s, important developments have taken place in the housing finance system. In the 1...
Due to the numerous outside forces and factors which affect the housing and mortgage industry it is ...
From the late 1990s through 2005, the U.S. experienced an unprecedented housing boom, which boosted ...
During the 1960s and 1970s, the U.S. government closely regulated the single-family housing finance ...
the move toward adjustable-rate mortgages as part of the downfall of the U.S. mortgage market, in fa...
Reviews trends in the U.S. housing market, including homeownership rates, prime and subprime mortgag...
American Housing Financing Attempt at a Comparative Study Within a single generation, American ...
In the aftermath of the financial crisis, major reforms of the U.S. housing finance system are likel...
This study is structured around two objectives: surveying the 180 years ’ evolution of the US mortga...
The American Mortgage in Historical and International Context Home mortgages have loomed continually...
Home mortgages have loomed continually larger in the financial situation of American households. In ...
We show that the determinants of mortgage borrowing and other forms of consumer credit differ: borro...
Recent research has emphasized the negative effects of finance on macroeconomic performance and even...
Between 1880 and 1929, urban residential mortgage loans became widely available in the United States...
“The Ownership Society” examines the residential mortgage system in the United States from the 1960s...
Since the mid-1980s, important developments have taken place in the housing finance system. In the 1...
Due to the numerous outside forces and factors which affect the housing and mortgage industry it is ...
From the late 1990s through 2005, the U.S. experienced an unprecedented housing boom, which boosted ...
During the 1960s and 1970s, the U.S. government closely regulated the single-family housing finance ...
the move toward adjustable-rate mortgages as part of the downfall of the U.S. mortgage market, in fa...
Reviews trends in the U.S. housing market, including homeownership rates, prime and subprime mortgag...
American Housing Financing Attempt at a Comparative Study Within a single generation, American ...
In the aftermath of the financial crisis, major reforms of the U.S. housing finance system are likel...
This study is structured around two objectives: surveying the 180 years ’ evolution of the US mortga...