Tipping Points III: Debt-Financed Homeownership — Its Evolution, Impact, and Future : Conference Proceedings
The third Tipping Points symposium, presented by the Center for Household Financial Stability and the Private Debt Project, was held in October 2018 in Washington, D.C., and looked at the evolution, impact and future of debt-financed homeownership.
- 2010s
- Session List
- Executive Summary
- Mortgaging Household and Global Financial Stability : To What End?
- Do Changes in Mortgage Credit Constraints Explain the Housing Boom and Bust?
- Modigliani Meets Minsky : American Household Debt, 1949-2016
- The Distribution of Risk and the Great Recession : Old Problems, New Crises
- The Case for Homeownership
- Ten Years Since the Financial Crisis : Some Lessons for Reducing Risks to Households
- Republican Home-Owning
In order to aid in the retrieval of information from this publication, significant tables, charts, and/or articles have been extracted and can be viewed individually or across a span of issues.
Video of the keynote conversation "Debt-Financed Homeownership: Is it Worth the Risks? What is its Future?" featuring panelists Sarah Rosen Wartell, President, Urban Institute; Paul Willen, Senior Economist, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston; and Michael Stegman, Senior Research Fellow, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, is available on YouTube.
2018
Tipping Points III: Debt-Financed Homeownership — Its Evolution, Impact, and Future : Conference Proceedings. 2018, https://fraser.stlouisfed.org/title/9374, accessed on December 5, 2025.