What the M
What the M
Episode 32 - Mark Calabria
It’s that time again… for a new episode of What the M! This week, Kent and Steve interview Mark Calabria. Mark is an author, advisor, economist, and the former Director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA).
Mark received his BA in Economics, as well as his PHD in Economics, from George Mason University. He then worked as a Senior Staff Member for the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs. From 2009 to 2017, he was the Director of Financial Regulation Studies at the Cato Institute. From 2017 through 2019, he was the Chief Economist to the Vice President of the United States. In 2019, he became the Director of the FHFA.
Mark is currently the Managing Director of SEDA, an elite expert witness firm specializing in financial services. We are honored that Mark took the time to sit down with us and share his insights regarding Covid’s effect on the housing market, which is the subject of his fascinating new book, “Shelter from the Storm: How a Covid Mortgage Meltdown was Averted.”
Welcome to What the M, Mark!
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“This is a story about how you can directly help Main Street without bailing out Wall Street.”
https://www.amazon.com/Shelter-Storm-Mortgage-Meltdown-Averted/dp/1952223563
The COVID-19 pandemic upended our daily lives and transformed the political landscape. The crisis was not only an unprecedented shock to our health care system but also an unprecedented threat to our economic well-being, including the mortgage and housing markets. While the primary focus of the federal response was appropriately on public health, a critical aspect of that response was the efforts to keep families in their homes.
Despite the reforms following the 2008 financial crisis, our financial markets were not prepared. March 2020 brought another financial crisis, moderated by the responses of our financial regulators. Calls for bailouts rose again, but some were determined not to repeat the many mistakes of 2008.
As the director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), which oversees Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal Home Loan Banks, Mark Calabria was responsible for leading that response. In Shelter From the Storm, he tells the story of how millions of families were provided mortgage and rental assistance―both to keep them safe and to keep our financial markets functioning. He offers readers a peek behind the curtain of government decisionmaking in a crisis and shows how FHFA minimized housing disruptions at little to no cost to the taxpayer and resisted repeated calls for industry bailouts and subsidies.
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