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Current Topic: Home and Garden

This American Life 355: The Giant Pool of Money
Topic: Home and Garden 6:41 am EDT, May 16, 2008

A special program about the housing crisis produced in a special collaboration with NPR news. We explain it all to you. What does the housing crisis have to do with the turmoil on Wall street? Why did banks make half-million dollar loans to people without jobs or income? And why is everyone talking so much about the 1930s? It all comes back to the Giant Pool of Money.

This American Life 355: The Giant Pool of Money


A 30,000-Volume Window on the World
Topic: Home and Garden 6:41 am EDT, May 16, 2008

FOR the last seven years, I’ve lived in an old stone presbytery in France, south of the Loire Valley, in a village of fewer than 10 houses. I chose the place because next to the 15th-century house itself was a barn, partly torn down centuries ago, large enough to accommodate my library of some 30,000 books, assembled over six itinerant decades. I knew that once the books found their place, I would find mine.

A 30,000-Volume Window on the World


Snap into Action for the Climate | Orion magazine
Topic: Home and Garden 9:02 pm EDT, May 11, 2008

The terrifying new speed of global warming and our last chance to stop it

Snap into Action for the Climate | Orion magazine


Old Wine in a New Bottle: Subprime Mortgage Crisis—Causes and Consequences
Topic: Home and Garden 6:01 am EDT, May  2, 2008

This paper seeks to explain the causes and consequences of the United States subprime mortgage crisis, and how this crisis has led to a generalized credit crunch in other financial sectors that ultimately affects the real economy. It postulates that, despite the recent financial innovations, the financial strategies—leveraging and financial risk mismatching—that led to the present crisis are similar to those found in the United States savings-and-loan debacle of the late 1980s and in the Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s. However, these strategies are based on market innovations that have heightened, not reduced, systemic risks and financial instability. They are as the title implies: old wine in a new bottle. Going beyond these financial practices, the underlying structural causes of the crisis are located in the loose monetary policies of central banks, deregulation, and excess liquidity in financial markets that is a consequence of the kind of economic growth that produces various imbalances—trade imbalances, financial sector imbalances, and wealth and income inequality. The consequences of excessive risk, moral hazards, and rolling bubbles are discussed.

Old Wine in a New Bottle: Subprime Mortgage Crisis—Causes and Consequences


Green giants: Our love affair with trees
Topic: Home and Garden 6:44 am EDT, Apr 28, 2008

From mighty oaks to humble hazels, our sylvan treasures have never been more highly valued – or popular. As a record 10 million green-fingered Britons prepare to plant saplings, Michael McCarthy explores a root and branch revolution

Green giants: Our love affair with trees


The homeownership ideology
Topic: Home and Garden 9:10 pm EDT, Apr 25, 2008

In the interest of promoting better housing policy in the future it is important to have a public acknowledgement of the follies of homeownership ideology. We don't have a bottomless pit of money to satisfy their perverse ideology. If homeownership does not make economic sense, then we should not tell people to sacrifice healthcare and other essential needs to make the ideologues happy. It's time to force some honesty into the discussion of housing policy - renting sometimes make sense.

The homeownership ideology


Net Worth and the Assets of Households: 2002
Topic: Home and Garden 9:10 pm EDT, Apr 25, 2008

Income and net worth are two important factors in determining economic well-being in the United States. This report looks at net worth and asset ownership by various socioeconomic factors, including monthly income. The data come from the Survey of Income and Program Participation.

Net Worth and the Assets of Households: 2002


In the Time of Trees - Photo Essays - TIME
Topic: Home and Garden 6:57 am EDT, Apr 23, 2008

Magnum Photographer Stuart Franklin has spent a decade exploring the beauty of trees and the unique place they occupy in man's world

From the archive:

In 1995, Steve Sillett received a Ph.D. in botany from Oregon State University, in Corvallis. Soon afterward, he took his present job, at Humboldt, and began to explore the old-growth redwood canopy.

No scientist had been there before.

The tallest redwoods were regarded as inaccessible towers, shrouded in foliage and almost impossible to climb, since the lowest branches on a redwood can be twenty-five stories above the ground. From the moment he entered redwood space, Steve Sillett began to see things that no one had imagined. The general opinion among biologists at the time -- this was just eight years ago -- was that the redwood canopy was a so-called "redwood desert" that contained not much more than the branches of redwood trees.

Instead, Sillett discovered a lost world above Northern California.

In the Time of Trees - Photo Essays - TIME


The Future of Housing Prices
Topic: Home and Garden 6:50 am EDT, Apr 10, 2008

Paul Krugman:

We should expect a prolonged, grinding decline in home prices, back to more or less their pre-bubble inflation-adjusted levels.

Brad DeLong:

My guess is that we will ultimately give back half of the doubling ...

The Future of Housing Prices


Subprime Outcomes: Risky Mortgages, Homeownership Experiences, and Foreclosures
Topic: Home and Garden 7:21 am EDT, Apr  9, 2008

This paper provides the first rigorous assessment of the homeownership experiences of subprime borrowers. We consider homeowners who used subprime mortgages to buy their homes, and estimate how often these borrowers end up in foreclosure. In order to evaluate these issues, we analyze homeownership experiences in Massachusetts over the 1989–2007 period using a competing risks, proportional hazard framework. We present two main findings. First, homeownerships that begin with a subprime purchase mortgage end up in foreclosure almost 20 percent of the time, or more than 6 times as often as experiences that begin with prime purchase mortgages. Second, house price appreciation plays a dominant role in generating foreclosures. In fact, we attribute most of the dramatic rise in Massachusetts foreclosures during 2006 and 2007 to the decline in house prices that began in the summer of 2005.

Subprime Outcomes: Risky Mortgages, Homeownership Experiences, and Foreclosures


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