The Housing Price Trap: A global bubble?

Date Published:

vacant-housing

The Australian prime minister (Malcolm Turnbull) was interviewed on the ABC program ‘7:30’ answering questions on government policy regarding tax concessions for real estate investments.  The Prime Minister spoke of the need to retain a specific tax concession because reducing the concession would reduce demand, and to reduce demand would result in lower prices.  The point was put “it is basic supply and demand”.  The same logic could suggest that restricting supply of housing would also be good policy, as that would also maintain, or even lift, house prices!    But the key fact is that here is a national leader, committed to ensuring high, and even artificially high, cost of housing despite the resultant social problems.  This raises some significant questions:  what is the desired out come with respect to housing prices?  Are political decisions exacerbating an international housing price bubble?

Three points are worth examining:

  1. So why does government policy support and even inflate housing prices, despite the social problems that may result?
  2. What are the resulting social problems
  3. The end result must be will be significant collapse in the financial system

1. So why does government policy support housing prices?

High housing prices can have negative consequence, so why have policy to keep prices at high level?

We have had around 300 years of strong population growth. That means 300 years where year on year, the demand for housing increases.  That means 300 years where the land component of housing, has more valuable year on year, driven by that increasing demand.  The result is that the premise ‘on average, over time, real estate values will rise’ have become a pillar of our economic structure.  Our economic system has evolved around the concept that over time, on average, any original mortgage against real estate will decline as a percentage of the value of the real estate, and thus the mortgage represents a decreasing risk over time.

The above interview with a prime minister for a country where 2/3 of the population own their home.  Therefore, 2/3 of voters see economic benefit from an rise in the value of homes.  It then follows that a rise in the value of homes nationally, increases national wealth. Households can leverage this increased home value which injects cash into the economy creating a stronger economy.

Further, the GFC helped demonstrate the consequences when home values drop.  No one wishes to repeat what has happened in some cities in the US during the GFC.  It seems logical that steps to support the continuing increase home prices provide protection against a fall in home prices.  This provides great scare tactics against any step the may slow or take some percentage from home prices.

So policies that ensure home prices continue to rise can enjoy strong voter support, can stimulate the economy and provide ready-made scare tactics for any alternative.

2. What are the resulting social problems?

All the points above sound so positive, just what can the negatives be?

The most obvious negative is that as home prices increase, less people can afford homes. And as rents tend to also rise as ownership prices increase, this means that not only a rise in those that cannot afford to own a home, but also a rise in the percentage of people who cannot afford anywhere to live at all.

The more homes you own, the wealthier you become in order to acquire even more homes.  So the resulting trend is a concentration of wealth, and an environment that favours investors owning homes rather than the home occupant. Rich and poor divides feed social unrest.

3. The end result is significant financial collapse.

Eventually, the home ownership level will change the voter balance, and policies to reduce home prices will an election.  Either this or some other factor will This can be well predicted but eventually it is an issue and prices will at some time fall.

The very population growth that has driven continual rises to current very high levels, is itself under threat.  It is quite obvious to all the family sizes are much lower today than a few generations ago,  and that is the subject of much more discussion in these webpages.  The effect is not uniform but some locations already have seen drops in population that puts downward pressure on real estate prices.  As the population plateaus, the number of place feeling this impact will grow.  Small triggers such as even small economic slowdowns can than have significant impacts.

It was discussed above how price rises increase household wealth and on average result in increases in borrowings.  The problem is that the rise in wealth is intangible as it is only the same houses, being declared more valuable without any real new wealth,  but the loans still need repaying if the valuation ever lowers again.  Sop politician fear the prices lowering again.  The result is that the increase in national wealth is very intangible and the increase in national debt is very tangible.   The higher level the prices reach, the greater the exposure.

How significant the impact will be will vary with levels of exposure to home loans. When the impact will be felt is largely a factor of where in the world we are discussing.  High immigration levels delay the population plateau effect.  However both population plateau effect and concentration of ownership of housing are trends everywhere in the long term.  A significant impact is eventually unavoidable.

A Global Bubble?

Globally, the rate of population growth has dramatically slowed.  Almost every country is seeing declining population growth, which will logically lead to almost every country seeing real estate slow.  But slowing, or effectively halting, population growth should stall prices, no?  That makes sense except in many markets, prices are inflated by the growth, which means remove the growth and there is a correction.  The GFC was very much driven by one of the first impacts. Expect more.

[TheChamp-Sharing]
[TheChamp-FB-Comments]

Table of Contents

Categories

Why population growth even before the explosion?

Throughout history, although no other species on Earth has experienced such long term overall population growth, even before the recent population explosion, the human population kept slowly growing.

Yes, we recently had an unprecedented population explosion, driven by the near elimination of previously tragic rate of infant mortality, but against a background of more gradual long-term growth, many of us may have never even realised we just had a population explosion.

But what drove that long-term population growth even before the explosion, and what will now happen as the explosion ends?

Read More »

Fragile Democracy: Was Scott ‘Scomo’ Morrison autocrat of Australia?

Democracy collapses when a leader, who is able to bypass the checks and balances, uses their position to retain power.

Steps by recent leaders Scott Morrison and Australia and Donald Trump in the USA, raise questions as to whether current reliance on conventions and constitutions reliably protects democracy.

China, Russia and even North Korea are all technically democracies, and all proof of how technically being a democracy does not necessarily deliver real democracy.

Read More »

Ukraine: Putin and China, method or madness?

What if Russia and China both intended that the invasion of Ukraine would trigger global inflation and food shortages, and a potentially new financial crisis?

That Putin sees himself in the image of Peter the Great and restoring the Russian empire is no secret, and is generally portrayed as evidence that Putin has completely lost the plot. But what if there is a bigger plan involving both Russia and China that starts with triggering a global financial crisis? A dangerous game by two desperate leaders needing to bring others with them as their own economies collapse.

Read More »

Ghost cities and ghost homes: housing finance crisis?

Anyone who believes in indefinite growth in anything physical, on a physically finite planet, is either mad or an economist.”

Attributed to Kenneth Boulding in: United States. Congress. House (1973) 

This applies to not just to population growth, but just maybe also to the growth in value of housing.

This page is a look at ‘ghost cities’ and ‘ghost homes’, and the window they provide into how distorted investment can become in the pursuit of growth.

The end result of the distortions can be overvalued assets funded by highly leveraged ordinary citizens. If that is the case, not just with ghost cities but beyond, the correction will clearly present a financial crisis.

Read More »

Decades long EV transition with no green quick fix.

Despite many claims that EVs have a dirty secret in that they are not really green at all, the real secret is how long it takes for the green payback. The claims are based on two realities: 1) the driving of EVs still results in emissions when EVs are charged from our current dirty electrical grids, and 2) the building of EVs also creates emissions, and sometimes increased emissions over building ICEVs.

However real data from critical studies shows that even in the worst case, overall, an high build emission inefficient EVs charged from a dirty grid still result in less emissions than ICEV. Just in that extreme case, only a marginal reducing in emissions!

However, already not all grids are “dirty grids” and as vehicles have an average lifespan of over 20 years either dirty grids will improve during that 20 years or we may have bigger problems. Build emissions from EVs largely track EV prices, and Wright’s law dictates both EV prices build emissions will soon fall below those for ICEVs.

The real conclusion from examining this question, is there is no quick fix green EV transition, but any delay in reducing production of ICE vehicles is creating a problem for the future!

Read More »

Big Oil, AKA Big Fossil: How real, and what about ‘big climate’?

Yes, big oil with value at over US$7 billion per day in revenue at stake clearly has a vested interest in arguing against climate change and downplaying risks, but on the other hand, aren’t there also vested interests exaggerating and overstating the risks of climate change? Effectively could ‘big renewables’, ‘big science‘ or ‘big climate’, be out lobbying and out promoting ‘big fossil‘?

Is this really a balanced fight, or is it more like the might of ‘big tobacco’ vs ‘whistle blower medical research’ all over again?

This is a look at the financial might on each side of the argument, and the respective motives for each side to overstate their case.

Read More »

Discover more from One Finite Planet

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading