rbhlms + finance   30

Renting v. Buying: New Evidence Emerges & Informs Housing Policy | e21 - Economic Policies for the 21st Century
Using data from 1979 to 2009, the authors demonstrate that renting was the superior investment strategy for most of the past 30 years. Counterintuitive as the finding may be to some, it is actually quite logical. Unless someone possesses the cash necessary to buy a residence, he or she will be renting one way or another. The choice is between renting the property directly or instead renting the capital necessary to buy the property.
renting  housing  economics  finance  from delicious
july 2011 by rbhlms
Explore China's Global Reach : NPR
Would be great to see this contextualized (as the presentation on financial networks noted -- the data can be taken to mean one thing in one context, and another in another). How does this fit into a larger network of input-output relationships, for instance? Compared to several other particularly large networks? (Brazil, India, EU, US, Russia)?
china  data  visualization  visualizar-11  finance  mammoth  from delicious
june 2011 by rbhlms
The Real Housewives of Wall Street | Rolling Stone Politics
"The technical name of the program that Mack and Karches took advantage of is TALF, short for Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility. But the federal aid they received actually falls under a broader category of bailout initiatives, designed and perfected by Federal Reserve chief Ben Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, called "giving already stinking rich people gobs of money for no fucking reason at all." If you want to learn how the shadow budget works, follow along. This is what welfare for the rich looks like."
the-new-class-war  economics  finance  government  corruption  wall-street  banking  from delicious
april 2011 by rbhlms
Where the Bank Bailout Went Wrong - NYTimes.com
Finally, the country was assured that regulatory reform would address the threat to our financial system posed by large banks that have become effectively guaranteed by the government no matter how reckless their behavior. This promise also appears likely to go unfulfilled. The biggest banks are 20 percent larger than they were before the crisis and control a larger part of our economy than ever. They reasonably assume that the government will rescue them again, if necessary. Indeed, credit rating agencies incorporate future government bailouts into their assessments of the largest banks, exaggerating market distortions that provide them with an unfair advantage over smaller institutions, which continue to struggle.
finance  financial-crisis  regulation  the-new-class-war  economics  politics  from delicious
march 2011 by rbhlms

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