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Bigger Isn't Necessarily Better examines the performance and
operation of the US homebuilding sector based on a detailed survey
of large home builders conducted by the authors in the period of
the great building boom of the 2000s. In contrast to the many books
that have focused on the financial side of the housing sector prior
to the Great Recession, the book examines the operational side of
the industry and what did, and, more importantly, what did not,
happen during the period of unprecedented growth. Despite the rise
of very large, national homebuilders during the boom years from
1999 to 2005 and the consolidation of the industry that accompanied
it, the authors find that major homebuilders often did not adopt
innovations in areas ranging from information technology, supply
chain practices, and work site management, nor improve their
operational performance. Given this, the book discusses what
homebuilders can learn from other industries as they face a
challenging future.
Why Democracy Needs Public Goods presents a new theoretical
perspective on public goods based on a framework of political
philosophy. Angela Kallhoff responds to negative narratives on
public goods that point out their role in causing market failures,
their cost on public finance and in regulation, and their irregular
and sometimes negative effects on social interaction. She instead
provides a normative approach arguing for their role in supporting
democracies at critical points by providing the basis for a public
forum through public space and infrastructure, improving social
inclusion through public healthcare and education, and fostering a
sense of national identity. This book also features a comprehensive
description of other arguments and theoretical approaches to public
goods, as well as assessing the classical economic approach of
collective action theory and counter arguments from the so-called
libertarian camp. Kallhoff also analyzes the problems of regulatory
frameworks and the normative issues resulting from the need to
support by means of public finance. These perspectives will be most
significant to political philosophers and policymakers, though the
language used and the examples given will make Kallhoff's arguments
comprehensible to non-experts as well.
This text explores the vexing problem of housing exclusion and the
related financial fallout, which has come into sharp relief since
the onset of the housing-led global credit crisis. The book looks
at the dimensions of affordable housing finance, compares current
policy approaches in the US, UK and Australia, and works towards
solutions.
'The definitive account of a sensational trade' Michael Lewis,
author of The Big Short Autumn 2008. The world's finances collapse
but one man makes a killing. John Paulson, a softly spoken
hedge-fund manager who still took the bus to work, seemed unlikely
to stake his career on one big gamble. But he did - and The
Greatest Trade Ever is the story of how he realised that the
sub-prime housing bubble was going to burst, making $15 Billion for
his fund and more than $4 Billion for himself in a single year.
It's a tale of folly and wizardry, individual brilliance versus
institutional stupidity. John Paulson made the biggest winning bet
in history. And this is how he did it. 'Extraordinary, excellent'
Observer 'A must-read for anyone fascinated by financial madness'
Mail on Sunday 'A forensic, read-in-one-sitting book' Sunday Times
'Simply terrific. Easily the best of the post-crash financial
books' Malcolm Gladwell 'A great page-turner and a great
illuminator of the market's crash' John Helyar, author of
Barbarians at the Gate
Original documents relating to minor foundation illustrate lower
levels of local society and government of the town. The Benedictine
priory of St Bartholomew outside Sudbury was a cell of Westminster
Abbey founded in the reign of Henry I by Wulfric the moneyer.
Although a small and poorly-endowed establishment, it has
nevertheless, and unusually, left over 130 original documents in
the muniments at Westminster, enabling this volume in the Suffolk
Charters series to be the first to be devoted to a group of
original documents rather than medieval transcriptions. Dating
mostly from the thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries, the
collection illustrates the lower levels of local society and the
government of the town, providing a wealth of evidence for trades
and occupations, place names and personal names in the Sudbury
area, including the earliest known reeves and mayors of Sudbury. Of
particular interest are a late-fourteenth century inventory of the
priory which brings alive the physical surroundings of the monks,
and the quantities of seals attached to the charters, including an
unusual number of women's seals. RICHARD MORTIMERhas been Keeper of
the Muniments, Westminster Abbey, since 1986; he has edited four
previous volumes in the Suffolk Charters series.
Increasing labour market flexibility is at the top of the European
agenda. A new and challenging view is a lack of mobility in the
labour market may arise from rigidities in the housing market. The
research in this book has been inspired by the intriguing
hypothesis put forward by Andrew Oswald that homeownership may be a
hindrance to the smooth working of the labour markets, as
homeowners tend to be less willing to accept jobs outside their own
region.
This book brings together leading economists from across Europe to
analyse the interaction between housing markets and labour markets.
In the EU homeownership rates have been on the increase, often as a
result of government policies, making the barriers that
homeownership creates in terms of labour mobility increasingly
important. This book shows on the one hand, at the individual
level, that homeownership limits the likelihood of becoming
unemployed and increases the probability of finding a job once
unemployed. On the other hand, the transaction costs inherent in
the housing market and homeownership hamper job-to-job changes and
increase unemployment at the country level. This insight provides a
clear policy message to European policymakers: reform in the
housing market, aimed at lowering transaction costs and providing
less generous subsidies for homeowners could be an effective
instrument for reducing unemployment and improving labour market
flexibility.
Non-Performing Loans, Non-Performing People tells the previously
untold stories of those living with mortgage debt in times of
precarity and explores how individualized indebtedness can unite
resistance in the struggle toward housing justice. The book builds
on several years of Melissa Garcia-Lamarca's engagement with
activist research in Barcelona's housing movement, in particular
with its most prominent collective, the Platform for
Mortgage-Affected People (PAH). What Garcia-Lamarca learned from
fellow activists and the movement in Barcelona pushed her to
rethink how lived experiences of indebtedness connect to larger
political- economic processes related to housing and debt. The book
is also inspired by feminist scholars who integrate the lens of
everyday life into explorations of contemporary political economy
and by anthropologists who connect macroprocesses to lived
experience. Distinctive in how it integrates a racialized,
gendered, and decolonial perspective, Garcia-Lamarca's research of
mortgaged lives in precarious times explores two principal
phenomena: first, how financial speculation is experienced in the
day-to-day and differentially embedded in the dynamics of (urban)
capital accumulation, and second, how collective action can unleash
the liberating possibility of indebtedness.
This edition of The Handbook of Mortgage-Backed Securities, the
first revision following the subprime mortgage crisis, is designed
to provide not only the fundamentals of these securities and the
investment characteristics that make them attractive to a broad
range of investors, but also extensive coverage on the
state-of-the-art strategies for capitalizing on the opportunities
in this market. The book is intended for both the individual
investor and the professional manager. The volume includes
contributions from a wide range of experts most of whom have been
actively involved in the evolution of the mortgage-backed
securities market.
This book is about property, informality and institutions relevant
to both the developed and the developing world. The author
introduces a new analytical tool, Reality Check Analysis, based on
theory and practice, and offers a solution to the long-standing
problem of informality and to the systematic frustration with the
issue.
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