US Home Ownership Rate Hits Lowest Level In Two
Decades
By Andre Damon
June 26, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "WSWS"
-
The economic recession that began with the collapse
of the housing market in 2007 officially came to an end in June
2009—more than six years ago. But by most indications, American
households are significantly worse off than they were at the depth
of the downturn. Despite the drop in the official unemployment rate,
household incomes have fallen, wages have stagnated and student loan
debt has soared.A
study by Harvard University’s Joint Center For Housing Studies
released on Wednesday points to another sign of the widespread
economic distress affecting broad sections of the US population: the
persistent fall in the share of households who are able to achieve
the “American Dream” of homeownership.
According to “The State of the Nation’s Housing
2015,” the share of American households who owned their own home
fell to 64.5 percent last year, the lowest level in two decades,
based US Census data. This was down from a homeownership rate of
over 69 percent in 2004, and was unchanged from the homeownership
rate in 1985, three decades ago.
The fall in homeownership was prevalent in all age
groups, but younger households were among the most affected. The
ownership rate for 35-44 year-olds was down 5.4 percentage points
from 1993, and has hit a level not seen since the 1960s. Only
slightly more than one-third of households headed by those aged
25-35 owned their own homes.
The report attributed the continuous decline in
homeownership to falling incomes, persistent long-term unemployment
and a significant tightening of credit.
As the report notes, “Despite steady job growth
since 2010 and a drop in unemployment to less than 6 percent, the
labor market recovery has yet to generate meaningful income gains.
At last measure in 2013, median household income was $51,900—still 8
percent below the 2007 level in real terms and equivalent to 1995
levels.”
In fact, the “steady job growth” is largely
fictional, with the official drop in unemployment due mainly to the
departure of hundreds of thousands of people from the labor force.
This is itself a significant factor in the persistence of low wages
and the decline in household income.
Even as household incomes have been eroded, banks
have severely tightened credit, particularly to those households who
need it most. One survey covering the period between 2001 and 2013
found a 37 percent drop in home loans issued to borrowers with poor
credit scores, compared with a 9 percent decrease among borrowers
with higher scores.
Lenders’ current tight-fisted lending practices
are the polar opposite of their policies in the run-up to the 2008
financial crash. Between 2000 and 2008, Wall Street banks made
billions of dollars suckering families into taking on mortgages for
homes they could not afford, then selling off the worthless
mortgages in the form of mortgage-backed securities. When this Ponzi
scheme collapsed, the federal government handed the banks hundreds
of billions in bailout funds.
For working families, there was no bailout, and
after more than 10 million foreclosures, about 13 percent of homes
remain “underwater,” with owners paying mortgages for more than
their homes are presently worth.
The growing inability of families to afford their
own homes had led to soaring demand for rental properties, and a
corresponding increase in prices. Last year, rents rose at twice the
pace of overall inflation.
This has led to a growing share of households who
expend a large portion of their monthly incomes simply on paying
rent. The report noted that over the past 10 years, the share of
young renters who spent one-third or more of their incomes on
housing increased from 40 percent to 46 percent, while those paying
more than half of their incomes on housing rose from 19 percent to
23 percent.
Growing housing costs add to the litany of other
financial pressures facing younger households. The report notes,
“The share of renters aged 25–34 with student loan debt jumped from
30 percent in 2004 to 41 percent in 2013, with the average amount of
debt up 50 percent, to $30,700.”
“Much to their detriment, cost-burdened households
are forced to cut back on food, health care, and other critical
expenses,” notes the Harvard report. “Affordable housing thus means
a dramatic improvement in quality of life for households able to
obtain it, but federal assistance lags far behind need.”
This is, to put it mildly, a significant
understatement. Even as the need for housing assistance has soared,
housing assistance funding has been slashed at every level of
government. Hundreds of thousands of families have lost federal
housing assistance as a result of the “sequester” budget cuts that
began in 2013, while cities throughout the country have cut back on
housing programs.
Last month New York City Mayor Bill De Blasio—promoted
as a “progressive” Democrat—announced a plan to jack up fees for
low-income residents in the city’s public housing projects, while
moving to sell off sections of public housing to private developers.
Meanwhile, at the top of society, there is money
to burn. The Wall Street Journal noted in a report
published Wednesday that CEOs at top US corporations saw their
median pay increase by 13.5 percent this year, to an average of
about $13.6 million. Billionaire shareholders did even better, with
the values of their shares, combined with dividend payments,
appreciating 16.6 percent over the past year.
Amid historically low rates of homeownership,
particularly among lower-income buyers, homebuilders are adjusting
to a market in which buyers are increasingly wealthy. The median
size of a new single-family home has increased by 12 percent between
2009 and 2013, while the median size of multi-family homes intended
for the rental market shrank.
Real estate companies are scrambling to build
extravagant housing for the super-rich. In New York City, developers
have been hard at work constructing “vertical mansions” in the areas
surrounding Central Park.
One of these buildings, 520 Park Ave, features 31
apartments sprawling to at least 4,600 square feet and listing at
$27 million or more. A penthouse in the building is currently
selling for $130 million, while at nearby 220 Central Park South,
one Qatari billionaire is combining several apartments into a $250
million “mega-penthouse.”
The oligarchs who inhabit these buildings, located
in a section of Manhattan known as “billionaires’ row,” are each
likely to own several more similarly-priced properties. As one
recent report noted, “The average billionaire owns four homes, with
each one worth nearly US$20 million….dotted around the globe.”
After six years of the Obama “recovery” it is
clear that there has been no improvement in the living conditions of
the great majority of the US population. The so-called recovery has
been for the corporate and financial aristocracy, whose wealth has
soared amid a surging stock market fueled by virtually unlimited
free money from the US Federal Reserve.
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