Work-in-Progress

Subprime Credit and Rent Transfer in Brazil: Who Wins When Consumers Default?

Thu
Sep
20

A Kellogg Work-in-Progress seminar with Visiting Fellow Maria Paula Bertran.

In Brazil, thousands of people have used their entire savings on homes they will never own. New residential buildings remain uninhabited in essential areas of Brazilian cities. Bertran shows that intentional lack of austerity in the analysis of real estate financing has a critical responsibility for this scenario. Granting credit to people who could not afford it resulted in breached contracts worth vast sums of moeny and the large-scale recovery of properties used as collateral.

Bertran bases her argument on public data on real estate and household indebtedness, specialized literature on the management of construction companies, journalistic data on the breach of financing contracts, and judicial decisions.

The results indicate that the supply of real estate financing in Brazil for people who could not fulfill their contracts depended on at least three kinds of stimulus: high brokerage rates, promises of high returns to investors of real estate companies, and increasing real estate prices made possible by excessive credit.

While the diagnosis for Brazil has been reasonably formalized, the differences and similitudes with American subprime credit remain to be understood. Are the factors responsible for the Brazilian housing bubble the same as those of US subprime crisis? The research suggests that only in part.

Work-in-progress seminars are designed to generate in-depth discussion of new scholarly work. For the pre-circulated paper and to attend, register with kievents@nd.edu.

Speakers / Related People
Maria Paula Bertran

This profile was current as of 2018 when she was part of the on-campus Kellogg community. Maria Paula Bertran (PhD, University of São Paulo School of Law) will join the Kellogg Institute for the fall 2018 semester as the Brazilian Fulbright Distinguished Chair in Democracy and Human Development...
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