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Thursday, June 2, 2011
 
 
SCHOLARS & FELLOWS
 
Alex J. Pollock
Resident Fellow
 
 
RESOURCES
 
 
RESEARCH AREAS
 
  • Accounting standards (FASB)
  • Banking structure
  • Financial system
  • Government-sponsored agencies (GSEs), including Fannie Mae and the Federal Home Loan Banks
  • Retirement finance
  • Housing finance
  • Corporate governance
Contact E-mail: apollock@aei.org Phone: 202-862-7190 Fax: 202-862-4875   Biography
 
Alex Pollock joined AEI in 2004 after thirty-five years in banking. He was president and chief executive officer of the Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago from 1991 to 2004. He is the author of numerous articles on financial systems and the organizer of the “Deflating Bubble” series of AEI conferences. In 2007, he developed a one-page mortgage form to help borrowers understand their mortgage obligations. At AEI, he focuses on financial policy issues, including housing finance, government-sponsored enterprises, retirement finance, corporate governance, accounting standards, and the banking system. He is a director of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, the Great Lakes Higher Education Corporation, the International Union for Housing Finance, and the chairman of the board of the Great Books Foundation.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD ALEX POLLOCK'S ONE-PAGE MORTGAGE FORM
 
Experience
  • President and CEO, Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago, 1991-2004
  • Visiting Scholar, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, 1991
  • President and CEO, Community Federal Savings, St. Louis, 1988-90
  • President, Marine Bank, Milwaukee, 1987
  • Positions of increasing responsibility in banking, 1969-86
 
Education
 
M.P.A., international relations, Princeton University
M.A., philosophy, University of Chicago
B.A., Williams College
 
Print All Scholar Works
Articles and Commentary

Debt of non-budget government agencies is not counted officially as "government debt," which is harmful to American Taxpayers.

As the debt hangover works its way through the system, the outlook is for housing to continue along an extended rocky and bumpy bottom, generally moving sideways in nominal terms.

The real name of the Dodd-Frank Act should be the "Faith in Bureaucracy Act." This is a faith I do not share. I see no evidence that the human minds operating in regulatory bureaucracies, and driven to political defense and expansion of their own jurisdiction and power, have any superior insight into the unknowable future and its ineradicable uncertainty.

[READ MORE]
 
Books Boom & Bust

While economic downturns can be frightening and difficult, people living in free market economies enjoy greater health, better access to basic necessities, better education, work less arduous jobs, and have more choices and wider horizons than people at any other point in history.

 
Events Financial Markets beyond Dodd-Frank

What should the objective of financial markets evolution beyond the Dodd-Frank Act be: making markets more robust, or democratizing and humanizing finance?

Living in the Post-Bubble World, Part Two: Something New or Business as Usual?

Panel discussion on what kinds of financial systems, banking, mortgage securitization, central banking, and related economic effects can we expect in the post-bubble world and if we find something new or just business as usual.

Taking the Government out of Housing Finance

"Taking the Government out of Housing Finance: Principles for Reforming the Housing Finance Market" is designed to provide common ground around which a bipartisan agreement may be forged. Join us for the first presentation of this document and a chance to ask questions and participate in a general discussion.

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Speeches and Testimony Taxpayer Exposure Through the Dramatic Expansion of Agency Debt

Debt of non-budget government agencies is not counted officially as "government debt," which is harmful to American Taxpayers.

A Dozen Ideas for What to Do About Fannie and Freddie

Alex Pollock gives the House Financial Services Committee 12 different solutions and ideas for moving forward and dealing with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

The Future of Housing Finance

The housing finance system of the future needs to have countercyclical factors built into it and much bigger loan loss reserves in good times to avoid the illusory profits which feed booms and bubbles.

[READ MORE]