MIT Golub Center for Finance and Policy
Public Policy
IAP 2018: US Gov’t: Lender/Insurer of First, Last or All Resorts?
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This January, Doug Criscitello taught a new, for-credit class on the role of the U.S. government as a financial institution. The course touched on the history of government involvement in the credit marketplace, the economic rationale for credit intervention, and the many ways the U.S. government functions as a lender and insurer, focusing primarily on the areas of housing, higher education, and business.
What: U.S. Government: Lender/Insurer of First, Last or All Resorts? (15.S62)
When: January 17 & 18, 2018 from 1:00pm to 4:00pm
Where: GCFP Conference Room (E70-1370)
Day 1 - Historical perspective: Government involvement in credit marketplace
- Why do governments intervene in the private credit markets?
- Economic rationale for government credit support
- How did US government become world’s largest financial institution?
- Key counter-cyclical role during/after financial crisis
- Credit & insurance
- How do governments operate as lenders/insurers?
- Managerial challenges
- Cost of capital, pricing/budgetary cost
- Continuum of government subsidization options
- Need to measure/assess outcomes and impacts, not simple impacts
- Business opportunities arising from government credit programs
- Origination & Funding (including securitization activities)
- Servicing
- Regulatory Compliance
- Consulting
- Managerial challenges
Day 2 - US government credit assistance in 3 sectors
- US housing policy at a crossroads
- Fannie/Freddie, Ginnie Mae, FHA, flood insurance
- Higher education
- Student loans, from private to public model
- Business
- Small business assistance
- Export and overseas investment credit
- Clean energy programs
- Infrastructure development proposals
- Pension insurance