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Home Publications Blogs Beat the Press The Post is Badly Confused About Housing, Again

The Post is Badly Confused About Housing, Again

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Wednesday, 03 April 2013 04:32

The Washington Post, which relied on David Lereah, the chief economist of the National Association of Realtors, as its main and often only source on the housing market, remains seriously confused about housing. An article on efforts by the Obama administration to push banks to increase lending implied that the situation of the bubble years were normal.

It told readers:

"Before the crisis, about 40 percent of home buyers were first-time purchasers. That’s down to 30 percent, according to the National Association of Realtors."

Of course in the bubble years many people were buying homes with zero or even less than zero down payments. (Many borrowers were able to borrow more than the sale price of the home.) It is bizarre that anyone would use this period as a basis of comparison. The current rate of new homebuyers is closer to the historic norm.

The piece later tells readers:

"One reason, according to policymakers [anyone with a name?], is that as young people move out of their parents’ homes and start their own households, they will be forced to rent rather than buy, meaning less construction and housing activity. Given housing’s role in building up a family’s wealth, that could have long-lasting consequences."

Actually renting also increases the demand for housing. Units switch back and forth all the time between being rental units and ownership units (30 percent of rental units are single-family homes). As a practical matter, the main factor depressing construction right now is the fact that the country continues to have a near record vacancy rate. The vacancy rate is the same whether a family is renting or owning.

Also, people who remember back to the housing bubble years (apparently a small group among housing experts) know that homeownership is not necessarily a good way to build wealth. Many houses fall in price. While this was less likely at the troughs hit in 2009-2010, with prices for lower end homes having risen sharply in the last year in many areas, new homebuyers again risk buying into a bubble. 

There is also a more general problem that in the current economy, with its weak labor market, many people cannot count on being able to stay in the same home for a substantial period of time. They may have to move to get or keep a job. Since there are substantial transactions costs associated with buying and selling a home (@ 10 percent round-trip), people who cannot expect to stay in a home for a substantial period of time are likely to end up as losers by owning. 

Unfortunately the homeowners chasing "the American Dream" are the only ones who suffer in this story. The "policymakers" who push homeownership in situations where it is not appropriate do not suffer consequences from giving incredibly bad advice.  

 

Note: Correction made to last sentence from earlier version, which had left out "not."

Comments (14)Add Comment
Minor Correction?
written by Matt Roder, April 03, 2013 6:52
Dean - Did you mean to write "do not suffer consequences" in the last sentence?
Burying the lead
written by Anon, April 03, 2013 6:56
Is it the Post that's getting it wrong about housing, or Obama?
...
written by RZ0, April 03, 2013 7:06
One could also argue that home ownership increases pollution, as it forces many job changers to stay in their home and lengthen their commute.
...
written by Kat, April 03, 2013 7:12
This should end well.
...
written by KeithOK, April 03, 2013 7:40
"...as young people move out of their parents’ homes and start their own households, they will be forced to rent rather than buy, meaning less construction and housing activity."

Because rental units aren't constructed??? One of the more stupid Post statement I've seen recently.
homeownership is not necessarily a good way to build wealth.
written by AlanInAz, April 03, 2013 9:41
I think this is a message not repeated enough, especially for those starting out. I am 66 and retired with a comfortable income producing investment portfolio. Throughout my working life I have tried to spend as little as possible on housing to allow me to accumulate savings and investments that would produce income. In my experience this is a message often ignored.

I purchased my first home in Delaware when I was 43 and sold it 13 years later to move to Arizona. The value of that home went nowhere but my investment portfolio showed major gains. During the last decade my investments have increased in value despite the tumble post 2008. To my mind housing is a very inefficient way to build wealth over the long term.
...
written by Kat, April 03, 2013 9:59
The link to Lereah's book at Amazon never fails to crack me up. I'm probably easily amused.
Maybe I should weep though.
alan...exactly...home value is not wealth...
written by pete, April 03, 2013 10:09
Buying a home is simply hedging against the future cost of housing...if the cost of housing rises, then homeowners are hedged against that. Renters suffer the increase. Thus, in the 2000s, rising costs meant that the 35% of non home owners suffered a huge loss, while 65% were hedged. Falling costs since then have been a boon to non homeowners.

Example, suppose a 70 year old owns a home. Now suppose housing increases. Is the 70 year old wealthier? Can they sell the house and come out ahead by renting? Hardly.

Example in non real estate. Suppose I own some oil company shares. Now suppose gas goes up in price. My shares go up. Great. Am I wealthier? Nope, gotta pay higher gas prices.
Home ownership is shelter
written by AlanInAz, April 03, 2013 10:48
Pete,

I did not buy a house to hedge costs but rather for extra space and control but I did adhere to my principle of trying to keep home ownership as small a part of my net worth as possible consistent with our desire for " comfort". My wife and I grew up in apartments and perhaps this is why we did not feel as deprived as some do today who must have a house early in life.
It's Subjective, Not Objective
written by James, April 03, 2013 1:33
Buying a house generally is a subjective one esp. with new couples and first kids coming up.

Do you think wives would welcome rearing kids in an apt? Let me know where you find them.

For buyers who have been observant, you notice the agents often focus on the wives? There's a compelling reason for that.
Basic decision is rent vs buy, not house or apartment
written by AlanInAz, April 03, 2013 4:33
I think the fundamental decision is whether to rent or buy and secondarily whether it is an apartment or a house. This decision is driven by many factors. I think young couples should give priority to the need to accumulate capital outside the house for medium term needs (children's education) and very long term needs (retirement, old age health care). I would not count on borrowing against the home value to finance future spending.
...
written by Jay, April 03, 2013 9:40
Cost of living makes a difference. Although, I have concerns about the lack of job stability, especially for 15-30 years. It's hard to pay for a house and save on rent expenses without continued employment where you live. It's hard enough when you sign a year lease and a company relocates you without paying relocation expenses.
...
written by liberal, April 03, 2013 11:06
James wrote,
Do you think wives would welcome rearing kids in an apt? Let me know where you find them.


Heh.
haha
written by Chris Engel, April 04, 2013 1:01
First time I saw Lereah's book:

Why the Real Estate Boom Will Not Bust - And How You Can Profit from It

Release date: February 21, 2006

How is this guy still in business? As Dean makes the point quite often: how bad do economists have to screw up before they are held accountable?

Sure, economists make mistakes from time to time, but can't those who REALLY f it up like this guy at least get their feed held to fire?!

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About Beat the Press

Dean Baker is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, D.C. He is the author of several books, his latest being The End of Loser Liberalism: Making Markets Progressive. Read more about Dean.

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