
Tags
Financial Systemic Issues: Booms and Busts - Central Banking and Money - Corporate Governance - Cryptocurrencies - Government and Bureaucracy - Inflation - Long-term Economics - Risk and Uncertainty - Retirement Finance
Financial Markets: Banking - Banking Politics - Housing Finance - Municipal Finance - Sovereign Debt - Student Loans
Categories
Blogs - Books - Op-eds - Letters to the editor - Policy papers and research - Testimony to Congress - Podcasts - Event videos - Media quotes - Poetry
Are Remote Workers More Productive? We Finally Have the Answer
Published in FOND.
Productivity is typically measured by an individual’s output vs. input over a period of time. One example of this is gross domestic product (GDP) per worker, which measures output by person over the course of a year. However, the ways in which we measure productivity today are much more complex.
The New Campus Housing Bubble
Published in Forbes, The Independent Institute, Ohio University College of Arts & Sciences Forum, and Catalyst.
My good friend, banker-scholar Alex Pollock of the R Street Institute, has shared with me some startling new data. High priced, comparatively luxury college student housing has been popular, and in this century lots of apartment complexes have been built with many amenities —granite or marble counter-tops, fancy swimming pools or saunas, etc. With unemployment rates below four percent and low overall real estate delinquency since recovering from the traumas of a decade or more ago, this sector should be booming. But according to a story published by Wolf Street (Wolf Richter), delinquencies are rising dramatically.
Taxpayers are the GSEs’ true stockholders
Published by the American Enterprise Institute and National Mortgage News.
At a conservative 16 basis points per year, taxpayers would earn some $7 billion annually after taxes, according to one estimate.
Crypto mining and buying under threat from US Congress?
Published in Crypto Disrupt.
Many of the committee members warned that having such a central system could amplify the risk of bank runs with several major institutions already recoiling against the idea. A senior person at the R Street Institute, Alex Pollock, slammed the idea of CBDC at the hearing on Wednesday when he said it is “a terrible idea – one of the worst financial ideas of recent times.”
The Parallel Democratic Dilemmas of the Court and the Fed
Published by Law & Liberty.
As a result, critics like Alex Pollock have argued: “When a crisis hits, their own interventions usually, if not typically, create the conditions for future crises.” One interesting result of comparing the Supreme Court to the Fed is to wonder whether this criticism should apply to the Court as well. That is, one might question the institutional capacity of the Court to predict the long-term constitutional needs of the republic and use their discretion to update the law accordingly.
Too big to fail or bail
From Peacefare:
On June 4 the American Enterprise Institute hosted a panel discussion titled “Europe’s Populist and Brexit Economic Challenge” moderated by Alex J. Pollock of the R Street Institute and featuring Lorenzi Forni (Prometeia Associazione), Vitor Gaspar (International Monetary Fund), Desmond Lachman (AEI) and Athanasios Orphanides (MIT). The panel discussion was centered around Italy’s rising populism and economic woes, with a short discussion about the possibility of a no-deal Brexit causing damage to the European economy.
PRO: Taxpayers shouldn’t get stuck with a $1.5 trillion loan default tab
From Richmond Times-Dispatch, Austin American-Statesman, Chicago Tribune, and The Guam Daily Post.
As the noted financial scholar Alex J. Pollock, former president and CEO of the Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago, suggests: Make the schools pay 20% of the debt obligations of former students facing loan delinquency or default.
Treasury’s Phillips Says GSEs Have Paid Back Taxpayers
Published in Seeking Alpha.
In the video above he’s responding to a question from Alex Pollock, who put together an article on the 10% moment. The theory behind the 10% moment is to ignore the accounting fraud and the net worth sweep and to calculate the cash ROI on taxpayer dollars invested into Fannie and Freddie. Alex suggests that the current cash on cash ROI is 11.5%. His logic is that because this exceeds the original 10%, the government can say it’s been paid back. Craig Phillips calls Alex his hero for coming up with this concept and says that taxpayers have been paid back.
House Report on Consumers First Act
Published by the House Financial Services Committee.
In the 115th Congress, the Committee held a hearing entitled “A Legislative Proposal to Create Hope and Opportunity for Investors, Consumers and Entrepreneurs,” on April 26 and April 28, 2017. Testifying were Mr. Peter J. Wallison, Senior Fellow and Arthur F. Burn Fellow, Financial Policy Studies, American Enterprise Institute; Dr. Norbert J. Michel, Senior Research Fellow, Financial Regulations and Monetary Policy, The Heritage Foundation; The Honorable Michael S. Barr, Professor of Law, University of Michigan Law School; Mr. Alex J. Pollock, Distinguished Senior Fellow, The R Street Institute
Is Dodd-Frank council evolving, or throwing in the towel?
Published in the American Banker.
“In my judgment at the time” the FSOC was established was that “it was not well constructed,” said Alex Pollock, a senior fellow at the R Street Institute. “It’s set up to be naturally a logrolling operation among bureaucratic agencies. It’s a very hard kind of structure to get to work well, because everybody wants to defend his own territory from encroachment by somebody else.”
Pollock said the council’s ability to prevent crises should not be the sole criteria for judging the shift toward an activities-based approach, because the alternative of designating firms one by one might not succeed, either. “I think it’s worth a try.”
Cuestionan definición de servicios esenciales
Published in Metro PR.
Amanda Rivera, directora ejecutiva del Instituto del Desarrollo de la Juventud de Puerto Rico; Ana Cristina Gómez, profesora de la Escuela de Derecho de la Universidad de Puerto Rico (UPR), y Alex Pollock, del R Street Institute, también presentaron sus ponencias ante el comité cameral.
Demócratas y republicanos parecen ir por caminos distintos sobre la ley Promesa
Published in El Nuevo Dia.
El experto en finanzas Alex Pollock, del grupo R Street y quien fue invitado a la audiencia por la minoría republicana, recomendó que la JSF tenga más poderes y pidió al Congreso nombrar un jefe de finanzas que también funcione por encima del gobierno electo de Puerto Rico.
Como varios congresistas republicanos, Pollock criticó que el gobierno de Puerto Rico no haya publicado los informes financieros auditados de 2016, 2017 y 2018.
U.S House Natural Resources Committee Holds Hearing on Puerto Rico
Published in The Weekly Journal.
The U.S. House Committee on Natural Resources holds a hearing today on the status of Puerto Rico Oversight, Management, and Economic Stability Act (PROMESA): Lessons Learned Three Years Later.
Natural Resources committee Chairman Raúl Grijalva presides the 10 a.m. oversight hearing at the Longworth House Office Building.
Gov. Ricardo Rosselló, Natalie A. Jaresko, Executive Director, Financial Oversight and Management Board for Puerto Rico; Martín Guzmán, Non-Resident Senior Fellow for Fiscal Policy, Espacios Abiertos; Amanda Rivera, Executive Director, The Institute for Youth Development of Puerto Rico; Ana Cristina Gómez-Pérez, Associate Professor, University of Puerto Rico; and Alex J. Pollock, Distinguished Senior Fellow, R Street Institute are part of the witness list.
This Week in Financial Regulation, March 6th
Published in the Captured Economy.
The American Interest gives the history of the banking industry since the 1950s. As the Federal Reserve gained more authority, the industry became riskier and more concentrated.
The Fed Has Not Been Independent – Perhaps It Should Be Restructured
Published in The Heritage Foundation.
The Federalist Society recently posted a podcast of me and R-Street’s Alex Pollock discussing Federal Reserve independence. This topic is always fun because so many people assume that (1) the Federal Reserve should be independent; and, (2) the Federal Reserve has always been independent.
The Fed Has Not Been Independent – Perhaps It Should Be Restructured
Published in Forbes.
The Federalist Society recently posted a podcast of me and R-Street’s Alex Pollock discussing Federal Reserve independence. This topic is always fun because so many people assume that (1) the Federal Reserve should be independent; and, (2) the Federal Reserve has always been independent.
Fannie And Freddie Need More Capital
Published in Forbes.
Another reason for ending the sweep would be that the Treasury has already been paid back its $187.5 billion injection plus the 10% compound dividend payments required under the terms of the conservatorship. Any GSE revenues flowing to Treasury exceeds what it is rightfully owed, and accomplishes little else that could be construed as positive.
Book notes: Finance and philosophy, by Alex J Pollock
From Central Banking:
Pollock started his working life as a banker. In 1970, he was a management trainee in the international banking department of the Continental Illinois Bank of Chicago. He stuck with it, but in 1984 – by which time he was a senior vice-president – Continental Illinois Bank failed.
He writes it was “intellectually stimulating – indeed, a highly educational experience”.
Read the rest here.
Is Dodd-Frank oversight council still relevant?
Published in American Banker.
“The biggest thing on FSOC’s to-do list is to designate Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as the SIFIs they so obviously are in fact,” said Alex Pollock, distinguished senior fellow of finance, insurance and trade at the R Street Institute. “If Fannie and Freddie are not SIFIs, then no one in the world is a SIFI.
Banking expert warns Federal Reserve could go bankrupt if interest rates rise
There is growing concern among financial experts that the Federal Reserve will soon be bankrupt if interest rates continue to rise. One America’s Neil W. McCabe spoke with R Street’s Alex Pollock, who fears another financial crisis may be near.