

An edition of Public spirit in the thrift tragedy (1996)
By Mark C. Rom
Publish Date
1996
Publisher
University of Pittsburgh Press
Language
eng
Pages
326
Description:
The Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation failed spectacularly during the 1980s, costing taxpayers perhaps $200 billion. In this award-winning analysis, Mark Rom examines the political causes of this "thrift tragedy." He directly confronts - and rejects - the dominant scholarly "public choice" view that public officials were motivated mainly by self-interest. Instead, Rom argues that politicians and bureaucrats generally acted in the "public spirit" by attempting to obtain the common interest as they saw it. Using new evidence and innovative methods, Rom demonstrates that FSLIC's failure unfolded because of commitments that officials had made in the past and their uncertainties about how to fulfill these obligations in the future.
subjects: Government policy, Savings and loan association failures, Thrift institutions, United States, United States. Federal Home Loan Bank Board, United States. Federal Home Loan Bank System, Geschichte 1980-1996, Bausparkasse, Bankenkrise, Savings and loan associations, united states
Places: United States