Kevin Erdmann

-
Senior Affiliated Scholar
Kevin Erdmann is a senior affiliated scholar at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. He is currently engaged in two book projects with Mercatus on housing finance, land use restrictions, and monetary policy. His first book, Shut Out (Rowman & Littlefield, 2019), offers a contrarian theory on the causes of the housing boom and bust. Reviews of Shut Out have appeared in the Economic Record, Regulation, and the Washington Examiner.
Erdmann’s work has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, the National Review, and Politico, and it has been featured on C-SPAN. Erdmann also blogs at Idiosyncratic Whisk, where he published many of his original discoveries about the housing boom and the financial crisis as he began to investigate them. Eventually that evidence accumulated to form a comprehensive new paradigm through which to view the economy and financial markets, and Erdmann now develops and communicates the lessons of this new framework for policymakers, investors, and firms.
Erdmann was a small business owner for 17 years. He holds a master’s degree in finance from the University of Arizona.
Latest Work
- | Housing Housing
- | Public Interest Comments Public Interest Comments
Fewer Restrictions on Lending Can Make Housing More Affordable
- | Housing Housing
- | Expert Commentary Expert Commentary
What Are Homeownership Rates Telling Us?

- | Financial Markets Financial Markets
- | Public Interest Comments Public Interest Comments
Policymakers Should Reevaluate the Premises That Led to an Overhaul of Regulation Z
- | Housing Housing
- | Expert Commentary Expert Commentary
A Conceptual Starting Point for Housing Affordability and Public Policy

- | Housing Housing
- | Expert Commentary Expert Commentary
Does Homeownership Really Increase Household Liabilities?

- | Housing Housing
- | Expert Commentary Expert Commentary
Because of Housing, All Taxes on Capital Tend to Be Regressive

- | Housing Housing
- | Expert Commentary Expert Commentary
Income Tax Benefits to Homeowners Are Regressive

- | Expert Commentary Expert Commentary
Are Property Taxes Regressive?

- | Housing Housing
- | Expert Commentary Expert Commentary
Low Property Taxes and Obstructed Housing Supply Are a Bad Mix

- | Housing Housing
- | Expert Commentary Expert Commentary
Property Taxes Can Be a Tax on Monopoly Power

Latest Work
- | Housing Housing
- | Public Interest Comments Public Interest Comments
Fewer Restrictions on Lending Can Make Housing More Affordable
- | Housing Housing
- | Expert Commentary Expert Commentary
What Are Homeownership Rates Telling Us?

- | Financial Markets Financial Markets
- | Public Interest Comments Public Interest Comments
Policymakers Should Reevaluate the Premises That Led to an Overhaul of Regulation Z
- | Housing Housing
- | Expert Commentary Expert Commentary
A Conceptual Starting Point for Housing Affordability and Public Policy

- | Housing Housing
- | Expert Commentary Expert Commentary
Does Homeownership Really Increase Household Liabilities?

- | Housing Housing
- | Expert Commentary Expert Commentary
Because of Housing, All Taxes on Capital Tend to Be Regressive

- | Housing Housing
- | Expert Commentary Expert Commentary
Income Tax Benefits to Homeowners Are Regressive

- | Expert Commentary Expert Commentary
Are Property Taxes Regressive?

- | Housing Housing
- | Expert Commentary Expert Commentary
Low Property Taxes and Obstructed Housing Supply Are a Bad Mix

- | Housing Housing
- | Expert Commentary Expert Commentary
Property Taxes Can Be a Tax on Monopoly Power

Latest Work
- | Monetary Policy Monetary Policy
- | Expert Commentary Expert Commentary
Was Housing Undersupplied During the Housing Bubble?

- | Expert Commentary Expert Commentary