The American government today supports a financial system based on
mortgage lending, and it often bails out the financial institutions
making these mortgages.
The Dead Pledge reveals the surprising origins of American mortgages
and American bailouts in policies dating back to the early twentieth
century.
Judge Glock shows that the federal government began subsidizing
mortgages in order to help lagging sectors of the economy, such as
farming and construction. In order to encourage mortgage lending, the
government also extended unprecedented assistance to banks. During the
Great Depression, the federal government made new mortgage lending and
bank bailouts the centerpiece of its recovery program. Both the Herbert
Hoover and Franklin Roosevelt administrations created semipublic
financial institutions, such as Fannie Mae, to provide cheap, tradable
mortgages, and they extended guarantees to more banks and financiers.
Ultimately, Glock argues, the desire to protect the financial system
took precedence over the desire to help lagging parts of the economy,
and the government became ever more tied into the financial world.
The Dead Pledge recasts twentieth-century economic, financial, and
political history and demonstrates why the greatest "safety net" created
in this era was the one supporting finance.