Answer: Actually, you’re in luck. I do know of one such study; it was done a few years ago by Alex Pollock, a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington and the former president of the Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago.
Pollock looked back to 1933, when Congress created the Home Owners’ Loan Corp. as a temporary fix “to relieve the mortgage strain and then liquidate.”
While the current mortgage meltdown and resulting — or corresponding, depending on your point of view — housing bust has been described as the worst since the Great Depression, it is nothing when compared to what happened in ‘33, when a financial and economic collapse occurred that is all but impossible to imagine today.
Back then, about half of all mortgage debt was in default. Unemployment reached 25%, thousands of banks and savings and loans had failed and annual mortgage lending had fallen by some 80%. New residential construction had dropped by 80% as well. (more)
Here's a link to a report I wrote with Susan Hoffmann for the IBM Business of Government. We offer an indepth examination of the HOLC.
ReplyDeletehttp://hou23bogp01.clearlake.ibm.com/report/managing-700-billion-bailout-lessons-home-owners-loan-corporation-and-resolution-trust-corpor
If you're interested in the history of the HOLC and the Federal Home Loan Bank System generally you might be interested in a book that was recently published by SUNY university press, tited "Mission Expansion and the Federal Home Loan Bank System." It's available through Amazon and www.sunypress.edu
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