Nobel Prize winner speaks on housing bubble
Tampabay.com

Latest poll

Jobs strain
Experts expect job losses to get worse before they get better. How are you feeling about your job?
I'm a valuable player in a recession-resistant industry. I'll be fine.
I'm cutting my spending now -- who knows what the next few months hold.
I've already been downsized.

Categories

Comment Policy

    Please be sure your comments are appropriate before submitting them. Inappropriate comments include content that:
  • Is defamatory or libelous
  • Is abusive, harassing, or threatening
  • Is obscene, vulgar, or profane
  • Is racially, ethnically or religiously offensive
  • Is illegal or encourages criminal acts
  • Is known to be inaccurate or contains a false attribution
  • Infringes copyrights, trademarks, publicity or any other rights of others
  • Impersonates anyone (actual or fictitious)
  • Is off-topic or spam
  • Solicits funds, goods or services, or advertises
  • The St. Petersburg Times does not edit posts but reserves the right to delete comments that violate our policy.

No Academy for Geithner's vague rescue pitch | Main | Job losses KO Tampa Bay in apartment markets »

February 10, 2009

Nobel Prize winner speaks on housing bubble

Vernonsmithchapmanuniversity It's not every day that a Nobel Prize-wining economist shows up to discuss the housing bubble -- something near, dear and painful to Floridians. This Friday, Feb. 13 at 10 a.m., economist Vernon Smith will discuss the recent turmoil in the U.S. economy and how it got this way at the University of South Florida College of Business in Tampa. His lecture is titled: “The Housing Bubble That Engulfed the Economy.”

The timing could not be any better, given this week's efforts by President Obama to sell the  public on the economic stimulus package, the efforts to pass such legislation through a divided Congress, and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner's sales pitch on the bank rescue package (and resulting backlash in the stock markets). Among Smith's ideas he will discuss: Recapitalizing banks to restore confidence in the credit financing of homes, autos, other durables; privatizing whatever value can be salvaged in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac; getting out of the housing finance subsidy business, and letting bankruptcies happen in the retail and auto industries.

“Dr. Smith is coming to talk about a problem of enormous proportions here in Florida: the housing bubble that occurred and its almost overwhelming ramifications on the U.S. and world economies,” said Bob Forsythe, dean of the USF College of Business in Tampa.

The Nobel Laureate currently teaches at Chapman University in California. Often referred to as the "father of experimental economics," Smith was awarded the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences in 2002 for his groundbreaking work in the field. The author or co-author of more than 250 articles and books, the popular lecturer will spend two days in Tampa, speaking with students and faculty at this open lecture, as well as participating in several smaller, private gatherings with local business leaders.

Smith speaks at the USF Business School. Here's a map. The business school is just to the left of the Sun Dome. Information at (813) 974-0022.

-- Robert Trigaux, Times Business Columnist

Comments

Post a comment

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In.

About This Blog

Wake up! Grab your coffee and start a new daily habit of checking the Venture blog. Just as your workday begins, business columnist Robert Trigaux dishes his take on the latest news and views relevant to Tampa Bay. Throughout the business day, Trigaux and his fellow journalists bring you events, people, deals, triumphs and failures across the Tampa Bay economy. It's an inside look at a most elusive species: our business movers and shakers.

Robert Trigaux has worked as a St. Petersburg Times business columnist, editor and reporter since 1991. He has covered business issues since the late 1970s in Florida, Washington, D.C., London and New York. His print column normally appears Sundays, Tuesdays and Thursdays in the Times.

E-mail Robert Trigaux: trigaux@tampabay.com

Subscribe to this Blog

TampaBay.com on Facebook

Most Popular Categories

Advertisement