From the Cover
Dodd–Frank’s Unintended Consequences for Housing
The 2010 legislation has hurt “small-dollar” housing and low-income neighborhoods.
Behind the Issue
Unintended Consequences
The Podcast of Regulation
Incentives matter, but they don’t care about your intentions. In this episode Paul and Peter start by talking with special guest and Truist Distinguished Professor of Economics at Winston-Salem State University Craig Richardson. He discusses how the federal government tried to prevent greedy banks from taking advantage of homebuyers but just ended up making it harder for first-time homebuyers, especially those from minority communities, to afford a house. They also discuss a review of Matthew Desmond’s book Poverty, by America, as well as efforts by the Biden administration to boost the transition to electric vehicles.
Featuring Peter Van Doren, Paul Matzko, and Craig Richardson
Features
Revisiting Bowles’s Aphorism
Improving regulatory compliance requires more than just going after “bad apples.”
Will Actuaries Come Clean on Public Pensions?
Model disclosures would obscure trillions of dollars of public pension debt.
More Volume than Value in Health Quality Measures?
Efforts to measure treatment quality need to be more transparent, not more complex.
Analyzing the EV Rule
Will the proposed rule save Americans $1.6 trillion as the EPA claims?
Neo-Brandeisianism’s Democracy Paradox
Though concerned with “democratic values, ” the new antitrust impairs actual democratic functioning.