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Not-So-Sweet Home
by Paul Krugman
“Owning a home lies
at the heart of the American dream.” So declared President
Bush in 2002, introducing his “Homeownership
Challenge” — a set of policy initiatives that were
supposed to sharply increase homeownership, especially for minority
groups. Oops. While homeownership rose as the housing bubble inflated,
temporarily giving Mr. Bush something to boast about, it plunged
— especially for African-Americans — when the
bubble popped.
But
here’s a question rarely asked, at least in Washington: Why
should ever-increasing homeownership be a policy goal? How many people
should own homes, anyway?
Listening to politicians, you’d think that every family should
own its home — in fact, that you’re not a real American
unless you’re a homeowner. “If you own something,”
Mr. Bush once declared, “you have a vital stake in the future of
our country.” Presumably, then, citizens who live in rented
housing, and therefore lack that “vital stake,” can’t
be properly patriotic. Bring back property qualifications for voting!
Even Democrats seem to share the sense that Americans who don’t
own houses are second-class citizens. Early last year, just as the
mortgage meltdown was beginning, Austan Goolsbee, a University of
Chicago economist who is one of Barack Obama’s top advisers,
warned against a crackdown on subprime lending. “For be it ever
so humble,” he wrote, “there really is no place like home,
even if it does come with a balloon payment mortgage.”
And the belief that you’re nothing if you don’t own a home
is reflected in U.S. policy. Because the I.R.S. lets you deduct
mortgage interest from your taxable income but doesn’t let you
deduct rent, the federal tax system provides an enormous subsidy to
owner-occupied housing. On top of that, government-sponsored
enterprises — Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan
Banks — provide cheap financing for home buyers; investors who
want to provide rental housing are on their own.
In effect, U.S. policy is based on the premise that everyone should be
a homeowner. But here’s the thing: There are some real
disadvantages to homeownership.
First of all, there’s the financial risk. Although it’s
rarely put this way, borrowing to buy a home is like buying stocks on
margin: if the market value of the house falls, the buyer can easily
lose his or her entire stake.
This isn’t a hypothetical worry. From 2005 through 2007 alone
— that is, at the peak of the housing bubble — more than 22
million Americans bought either new or existing houses. Now that the
bubble has burst, many of those homebuyers have lost heavily on their
investment. At this point there are probably around 10 million
households with negative home equity — that is, with mortgages
that exceed the value of their houses.
Owning a home also ties workers down. Even in the best of times, the
costs and hassle of selling one home and buying another — one
estimate put the average cost of a house move at more than $60,000
— tend to make workers reluctant to go where the jobs are.
And these are not the best of times. Right now, economic distress is
concentrated in the states with the biggest housing busts: Florida and
California have experienced much steeper rises in unemployment than the
nation as a whole. Yet homeowners in these states are constrained from
seeking opportunities elsewhere, because it’s very hard to sell
their houses.
Finally, there’s the cost of commuting. Buying a home usually
though not always means buying a single-family house in the suburbs,
often a long way out, where land is cheap. In an age of $4 gas and
concerns about climate change, that’s an increasingly problematic
choice.
There are, of course, advantages to homeownership — and yes, my
wife and I do own our home. But homeownership isn’t for everyone.
In fact, given the way U.S. policy favors owning over renting, you can
make a good case that America already has too many homeowners.
O.K., I know how some people will respond: anyone who questions the
ideal of homeownership must want the population “confined to
Soviet-style concrete-block high-rises” (as a Bloomberg columnist
recently put it). Um, no. All I’m suggesting is that we drop the
obsession with ownership, and try to level the playing field that, at
the moment, is hugely tilted against renting.
And while we’re at it, let’s try to open our minds to the
possibility that those who choose to rent rather than buy can still
share in the American dream — and still have a stake in the
nation’s future.
Source: New York Times
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