Data-Driven Housing Policy with AEI’s Ed PintoIn this episode of the Top of Mind podcast, Mike Simonsen sits down with Ed Pinto, senior fellow and co-director of the AEI Housing Center at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), for a fascinating look at how housing policy shapes the market and the world we live in. Tapping into his decades of experience in the housing and mortgage markets, Ed shares lessons from the 2008 bubble we can apply to today, uses data to examine the relative merits of different housing policies over the years, and gives his take on how to tackle affordability and homelessness. He also talks about why he’s optimistic about the housing market in the years to come.
About Ed Pinto
Edward J. Pinto is a senior fellow and co-director of the AEI Housing Center at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI). A focus of his work continues to be the role of federal housing policy in the 2008 mortgage and financial crisis and how federal housing policy continues to create unwelcome distortions in the housing markets. More recently his research has focused on using light touch density to increase the supply of naturally affordable and inclusionary housing.
Before joining AEI, Mr. Pinto was an executive vice president and chief credit officer for Fannie Mae until the late 1980s. Today, he is frequently interviewed on radio and television and often testifies before Congress. His writings have been published in trade publications and the popular press, including in the American Banker, The Hill, RealClearPolitics, and The Wall Street Journal. In addition, as the director of the AEI Housing Center, he oversees the monthly publication of the AEI Housing Market Indicators, which has replaced AEI’s monthly Housing Risk Watch and AEI’s FHA Watch.
Mr. Pinto has a JD from Indiana University Maurer School of Law and a BA from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Here’s a glimpse of what you’ll learn:
What data is best to use for understanding housing in the U.S.
The biggest lessons of the 2008 bubble and what they tell us about today
The real impacts of over a decade of low-interest rates
Whether there’s a correction in home prices on the horizon
How Federal government policy from 100 years ago seeded the affordability crisis of today
Why affordability is so difficult for the government to solve
When the government should stimulate housing demand, and when they shouldn’t
What today’s mortgage environment tells us about the risks of mortgage defaults
Why the McMansion boom is the result of poor city planning
What cities should know about fixing homelessness
What he’s optimistic about in American housing in the next decade
Resources mentioned in this episode:
Connect with Ed on LinkedIn
American Enterprise Institute
Mike Simonsen on LinkedIn
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A true data geek, Mike founded Altos Research in 2006 to bring data and insight on the U.S. housing market to those who need it most. The company now serves the largest Wall Street investment firms, banks, and tens of thousands of real estate professionals around the country. Mike's insights on the market have been featured in Forbes, New York Times, Bloomberg, Dallas Morning News, Seattle PI, and many other national media outlets.
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# 2008 Housing BubbleThe significant rise and subsequent crash of the housing market in the United States during the mid-2000s, leading to widespread foreclosures.