Michael Stegman
Michael Stegman is a senior housing policy fellow at the Milken Institute Center for Financial Markets, a Senior Fellow in the Center for Household Financial Stability at the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank, and a Senior Fellow at the Center for Community Capital at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Previously, he was senior policy advisor for housing at the National Economic Council from 2015 to 2016 after serving three years as counselor to the Secretary of the Treasury for housing finance policy. As the top housing policy advisor in the White House, he coordinated administration policies on housing finance reform, access to credit, and other housing issues. He also convened the “Private Label Securitization Initiative” while at Treasury, bringing together key issuers and investors to explore hurdles to the return of a viable private label securitization market. Previously, he served as assistant secretary for policy development and research at the Department of Housing and Urban Development from 1993 to 1997. He also holds the position of MacRae Professor Emeritus at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
By This Author
How the Presence and Type of Down Payment Assistance Affects the Performance of Affordable Mortgage Loans
How Lopping off the Wrong Loan Products to Trim the GSEs’ Market Reach Could Undermine Affordable Lending
Eliminating Exclusionary Land Use Regulations Should Be the Civil Rights Issue of Our Time
Meeting America’s Affordable Housing Needs Requires GSE Reform, and More
A Missing Piece of the Administrative Reform Puzzle: How the GSEs Generate Cross-Subsidies
Eliminating Exclusionary Land Use Regulations Should Be the Civil Rights Issue of Our Time
Community Reinvestment Lending: A Description and Contrast of Loan Products and Their Performance
To Rebuild America’s Post-Pandemic Economy, We Need to Rethink Housing
How the Presence and Type of Down Payment Assistance Affects the Performance of Affordable Mortgage Loans
A Missing Piece of the Administrative Reform Puzzle: How the GSEs Generate Cross-Subsidies
How Lopping off the Wrong Loan Products to Trim the GSEs’ Market Reach Could Undermine Affordable Lending
Eliminating Exclusionary Land Use Regulations Should Be the Civil Rights Issue of Our Time