Invited Papers

Housing and Opportunity
co-authors Arthur Acolin

Penn IUR Brief, February 2017

City and Suburbs – Has There Been a Regime Change? co-authors Arthur Acolin and Richard Voith

Penn IUR Brief, June 2016.

Coalescence in the Housing Finance Reform Debate co-author Patricia McCoy

Wharton Public Policy Initiative Issue Brief, Vol. 4 No. 6, June 2016.

Owning or Renting in the U.S.: Shifting Dynamics of the Housing Market co-author Arthur Acolin

Penn IUR Brief, May 2016.

Philadelphia’s Triumphs, Challenges and Opportunities co-authors Ethan Conner-Ross and Richard Voith

Penn IUR Brief, December, 2015.

Housing Policy Debate, 25 (4), July 2015, 813-816

Housing Finance in Retrospect co-author Arthur Acolin   Abstract  
HUD at 50: Creating Pathwaysto Opportunity, Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s Office of Policy Development and Research, (2015), 157-183

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) is generally associated with its public housing, rental assistance, and low-income homeownership programs. However, looking at HUD’s past 50 years shows that its programs have had a much broader reach and have contributed to shaping the American housing finance system. HUD was created as a Cabinet-level agency in 1965, but through predecessor agencies that were later folded into HUD, it has been an active player in the housing finance system since the 1930s. Indeed the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) and the Federal National Mortgage Association (“Fannie Mae”), which were developed in response to the Great Depression, are important actors in today’s U.S. housing finance system.

Next Steps in the Housing Finance Reform Saga

Wharton Public Policy Initiative Issue Brief, Vol. 3, No. 2, March 2015.

What Next for Housing Finance? co-author Adam Levitin

Wharton Real Estate Review XVI, Spring 2012, 72-77.

Housing Demand co-author Stephen Malpezzi

International Encyclopedia of Housing and Home, ed: Susan Smith, Amsterdam: Elsevier (2012), 404-407.