A Newsman and His Housing Crisis
Edmund Andrews wasn’t just reporting on the unfolding subprime-mortgage crisis — he was also living it. The New York Times’s economics writer and the author of the forthcoming Busted: Life Inside the Great Mortgage Meltdown talks to us about how and why he got tripped up by a deal that was too good to be true.
“I have no one to blame but myself for my woes,” Andrews tells us. “But it is too easy to snarl in contempt at homeowners who got in over their heads in the housing bubble. I’ve seen too many people who really were duped by the system, and I’ve learned too much about how corrupt the system itself had become.”
Read on for more of our exclusive interview.
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