Publication | Open Access
Macroeconomic Effects of Bankruptcy and Foreclosure Policies
139
Citations
29
References
2016
Year
BankruptcyInternational Financial CrisisReal Estate FinanceUnited StatesMacroeconomic EffectsManagementFinancial IntermediationEconomic AnalysisHousehold FinanceHousingEconomicsPublic PolicyCredit MarketBankruptcy Abuse PreventionFinanceMacroeconomicsAffordable HousingBusinessConsumer FinanceCaptures Rich HeterogeneityFinancial Crisis
I study the implications of two major debt-relief policies in the United States: the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act (BAPCPA) and the Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP). To do so, I develop a model of housing and default that includes relevant dimensions of credit-market policy and captures rich heterogeneity in household balance sheets. The model also explains the observed cross-state variation in consumer default rates. I find that BAPCPA significantly reduced bankruptcy rates, but increased foreclosure rates when house prices fell. HARP reduced foreclosures by 1 percentage point and provided substantial welfare gains to households with high loan-to-value mortgages. (JEL D14, K35, R31)
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1997 | 476 | |
2007 | 440 | |
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2015 | 354 | |
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