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California was at the epicentre of the collapse of the real estate
market in 2008, which had a devastating effect on the world
economy. Taking this diverse and powerful state as a case study,
this book presents a financial history of the property business,
from the time Spanish Missions were established to the Great
Recession. Financing California Real Estate provides the history of
expansions and contractions in the real estate market, and
describes factors in the state and nation which may have triggered
changes in the direction of growth in real estate lending. It
explores how financial institutions which provided funding for
building and buying homes changed over time, from the establishment
of Spanish Missions in 1769, to the Gold Rush, to rail
transportation, all the way through to the real estate bubble that
peaked in 2005. Using detailed information on financial
institutions to explain the changing nature of the real estate
market, this book ultimately suggests an alternative theory for
what led to the Great Recession. This book will be of interest to
researchers working in the area of real estate cycles in the
economy, historians interested in the economy of California, and
financial historians.
California was at the epicentre of the collapse of the real estate
market in 2008, which had a devastating effect on the world
economy. Taking this diverse and powerful state as a case study,
this book presents a financial history of the property business,
from the time Spanish Missions were established to the Great
Recession. Financing California Real Estate provides the history of
expansions and contractions in the real estate market, and
describes factors in the state and nation which may have triggered
changes in the direction of growth in real estate lending. It
explores how financial institutions which provided funding for
building and buying homes changed over time, from the establishment
of Spanish Missions in 1769, to the Gold Rush, to rail
transportation, all the way through to the real estate bubble that
peaked in 2005. Using detailed information on financial
institutions to explain the changing nature of the real estate
market, this book ultimately suggests an alternative theory for
what led to the Great Recession. This book will be of interest to
researchers working in the area of real estate cycles in the
economy, historians interested in the economy of California, and
financial historians.
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