Housing crisis
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The term housing crisis refers to acute problems with the provision or market for shelter and lodging. These include shortage and affordability crises as well as financial crises related to the real estate sector.[1]
Following the first definition, the term "housing crisis" or "affordability crisis" is currently used in the United States and other countries to refer to widespread shortages of housing in certain regions where people want to live. These shortages, caused in part by regulatory barriers to new construction, have led to a rise in homelessness, housing insecurity, and housing costs. Its different manifestations indicate that there is not one crisis but a "web of problems and dysfunctions."[2] Even in regions that are not experiencing an overall housing shortage, for example, the term housing crisis has been used to refer to shortages for specific segments of the population, such as a shortage of dedicated affordable housing for very-low income populations or permanent supportive housing for those with disabilities.
The term has also been used to refer to financial crises tied to the housing sector, such as in the United States during the subprime mortgage crisis of 2007–2008. Similarly, "housing crisis" has been used to describe financial problems in the Chinese property sector that began in 2020 and are ongoing.
Housing shortage
[edit]The term "housing crisis" often refers to issues around high prices for accessing housing, sometimes known as the housing shortage, housing crunch or the homelessness and affordability crisis.
Global housing affordability crisis
[edit]Cities around the world are facing an "affordability crisis" as part of a long run trend that has persisted for decades.
Economists debate the causes of this affordability crisis. The state of the debate as of 2022 was summarized by economists Christian Hilber and Olivier Schöni in a contribution to the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Economics and Finance:
"Three strands of the literature can be distinguished. The first is a strand of the urban economics literature, which highlights the importance of local long-run supply constraints, especially land use restrictions, in conjunction with local longrun demand growth, as crucial determinants of high and growing house costs. The second strand emphasizes macroeconomic factors and financing conditions. It argues that a unique macroeconomic environment with a decline in the real rate of interest (influenced by central banks) or unprecedented availability of housing credit may explain a significant fraction of the increase in house prices over the last two decades. The third strand focuses on the role of unrealistic expectations about future house price growth."[3]
Of the three strands, "the main underlying cause for the 'affordability crisis', which has been mounting for decades, is a combination of strong and growing demand for housing in desirable areas in conjunction with tight long-run supply constraints, both physical and man-made regulatory ones."[3]
Although major cities around the world face housing shortages, leading to the use of the term "Global housing crisis," substantial variation exists across countries and across planning systems.[4] Among developed countries, for example, cities in Japan have relatively abundant and affordable housing for their size, which some have attributed to nationalized control of zoning and easy and fast permitting for housing construction. Most English-speaking countries, on the other hand, stand out for planning systems that enable NIMBY obstruction of housing, with prices rising and housing falling into shortage as a result. Exceptions include Houston non-zoning approach with no restrictions on specific land use (YIMBY) but with other developmental code.[5] Developed European countries, which favor higher density construction than Anglophone countries, have followed a path intermediate between these two.[6]
Impacts
[edit]Housing affordability crises have especially hurt the finances of Millennials and Generation Z, who entered a more competitive housing market, resulting in paying a higher proportion of income towards housing costs.[7] Politico suggests that in many countries this has allowed populist politicians to stoke anti-immigrant sentiment among younger voters and has resulted in a generation more skeptical of the ability of democracy to deliver results.[7]
U.S. shortage and affordability crisis
[edit]Inflationary impacts
[edit]By the 2020s, the United States has faced a growing housing crisis defined by shortages of housing that differ in scope and effect depending on region or segment of the population. The housing shortage has been cited as a major factor in inflation in the US,[8][9][10] with Katy O'Donnell of Politico arguing that housing shortages were the single-biggest contributor to inflation.[11] The U.S. Census Bureau found that if you took out housing costs, inflation at the end of 2023 would have been 1.8% instead of 3.2%.[12] Artificial scarcity in the supply of housing, due to NIMBYism, has been a significant factor in making housing more expensive.[13][14] Freddie Mac estimated that the shortage of homes increased by 52%, to 3.8 million units, between 2018 and 2020.[12]
Cost-burdened
[edit]The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) defines affordable housing as "housing on which the occupant is paying no more than 30 percent of gross income for housing costs, including utilities."[15] HUD uses the terms "cost burdened" and "severely cost burdened" to describe individuals or families that spend more than 30% and 50% of their income on housing costs, respectively.[16] According to the 2020 U.S. census, 46% of American renters are cost burdened, with 23% severely cost burdened.[17] The affordable housing gap especially impacts the lower-income households in America. A 2017 HUD survey found that 89% of extremely low income renter households were moderately or severely cost burdened. 83% of very low income households, 54% of low income households, 20% of moderate income households, and 6% of high income households met the same criteria.[18]
Market-wide housing shortages in high-demand areas
[edit]Decades of under-building in economically prosperous metros has led to regional housing shortages with national implications. In the 19th century, housing development in the United States was characterized by rapid urban growth in economically productive places.[19] Throughout the 20th century, however, a number of regulations that were designed to block in-fill and direct greenfield development took hold, such as exclusionary zoning. These regulations had the net effect of reducing housing construction and reducing the ability of regional housing stock to adjust to changing market conditions. Beginning in the last quarter of the 20th century, market-wide housing shortages have existed in a growing number of markets throughout the country, starting in prosperous coastal regions, such as Boston, New York, or the California Bay Area.[20] In the last two decades, these shortages have spread from coastal superstar cities to affect broader areas of the country, so that on average there is a deficit of housing nationwide.[21] Rental vacancy rates, for example, which are one marker of the balance of housing supply, have declined across the country. While, in a balanced market, rental vacancy rates should fall between 7 and 8 percent, only one U.S. census region, the South, achieved target levels on average in its metro areas as of 2021.[22]
These regional housing shortages have had nationwide effects. Rates of migration within the United States have fallen, housing costs have risen in areas that would otherwise provide quality jobs, and incomes from region to region have increasingly diverged.[19] Immigration into the United States in certain markets could account for a miniscule amount of inflated housing costs while some Economists believe that deporations would exacerbate the crisis given the high percentage of foreign-born workers building and fixing homes, with a professor at Wharton arguing there is no way to increase the supply without more immigration.[23] Others point out that recent immigrants demand less space, often doubling-up.[23] Immigrants are also more likely to seek out and be recruited to help revitalize places with flagging downtowns and empty homes.[23]
Within areas experiencing these shortages, effects are especially acute among the young, the poor, among renters, those living in crowded conditions, and those experiencing homelessness. Areas with market-wide housing shortages have significantly higher rates of homelessness than those with adequate or surplus housing stock: Variations in rent-levels and vacancies are chief factors explaining regional variations in homelessness rates.[24]
In certain high-demand metros, single-family zoning has also contributed to the process of "McMansionization." Rather than preserving existing single-family homes, single-family zoning can lead to replacement and upscaling because of cost pressures associated with the housing shortage.[25] A trend towards larger single-family homes is also observable in national census data.[26]
After the COVID-19 pandemic, some baby boomers whose children have moved away have found it prohibitively expensive to move into smaller homes, a paradox caused by the higher prices of newer homes, tax benefits given to long-time owners, higher interest rates, and low supply of appropriately-sized housing caused by restrictive zoning that prohibits accessory dwelling units or requires single-family homes.[27] As of 2024, this shortage is estimated to be between 4 and 7 million homes, resulting in rents rising 30% since 2017.[28]
Affordable and supportive housing
[edit]In addition to market-wide housing shortages in certain regions of the United States, the term "housing crisis" has been used to describe persistent shortages of non-commodity and supportive housing provided to vulnerable members of the population. Even in regions with relatively abundant market-rate housing, the market can fail to supply safe and sufficient housing to populations with very low income or disabilities that impair independent living. Insufficient public funding has contributed to a distinct housing crisis affecting these groups.[29][30] Even regions with relatively abundant housing supply and low rates of homelessness, such as Mississippi, face challenges with street homelessness due to factors like addiction, as well as issues with housing quality.[31]
The affordable housing gap is a socio-economic phenomenon characterized by the scarcity of affordable housing relative to the demand for it.[32] This disparity is linked to social, racial, and economic inequality, and disproportionately affects households with lower incomes. The insufficiency of suitable affordable housing options can lead to negative outcomes for both families and communities, including homelessness.
Discrimination and evictions
[edit]In addition to shortage and affordability issues, the term "housing crisis" has been used for overlapping concepts such as a "fair housing crisis," involving residential discrimination and effects of segregation; an "eviction crisis"; issues of gentrification and displacement; and environmental concerns. Eviction, displacement, and forms of housing inequality are worsened by and related to the shortage and affordability crisis, but also have causes of their own and require distinct solutions.[2][33][additional citation(s) needed]
Climate-related costs
[edit]Rising insurance premiums due to natural disasters has been one source of climate-driven price increases,[34] with one estimate showing home insurance premiums rising 33% between 2020 and 2023.[35] Climate change can also raise energy costs as hotter summers require more energy to keep home cool.[35]
Price fixing
[edit]Rent algorithm
[edit]ProPublica in 2022 investigated the use of RealPage's algorithmic pricing scheme by many competing rental companies across the United States to set rental prices, which critics allege has helped to raise rents by limiting competition.[36] The US DOJ escalated its investigation into price fixing in March of 2024,[37] and filed an anti-trust lawsuit in August of 2024.[38]
In other countries
[edit]India
[edit]According to a 2012 report by the National Buildings Organisation (NBO), the shortage of housing units in urban areas was estimated to be 18.78 million. The shortfall is particularly acute for households belonging to the Economically Weaker Section (total household income does not exceed 300,000 rupees), with a shortage of 10.55 million units, as well as the Lower Income Group (total household income is between 300,000 and 600,000 rupees), with a shortage of 7.41 million units. The Middle Income Group and above (households with a total annual income exceeding 600,000 rupees) face a shortfall of 0.82 million units.[39][40][non-primary source needed]
New Zealand
[edit]Auckland quickly boosted supply and slowed the increase in rents and home prices by loosening constraints on the construction.[41][42] Auckland saw rents grow more slowly than in other parts of the country and more slowly than incomes since it started reforming its housing laws in 2013. As of July 2024, Ryan Greenaway-McGrevy estimated that rents were 28% lower than they would have been without the reforms.[43] Building on Auckland's success, the national government passed a bipartisan upzoning of much of the country's largest cities to allow 3 units and 3 stories on all residential parcels in October of 2021.[44][45]
United Kingdom
[edit]The United Kingdom faces regional shortages of housing, with undersupply and high demand in the south, relative to more abundant housing in economically depressed areas of the north.[46]
The UK National Planning Policy Framework uses the "standard formula" to assess local housing need. The formula uses household growth projections, adjusted for affordability[47] Critics of this method say that it does not account for the present backlog of housing. Households that live in poorly maintained or overcrowded accommodations would not be represented in the standard formula.[48] A 2019 report estimates that 4.75 million households in Great Britain are in need of adequate affordable housing.[49]
In the 2019 general election, both major political parties identified the housing gap as an obstacle for the country, and pledged to increase housing supply.[50][51] The Parliament has a stated target of 300,000 new homes a year by the mid-2020s.[52]
Financial crisis
[edit]Another use of the term "housing crisis" refers to financial crises related to the housing sector. Rapid swings and especially declines in housing asset prices can cause shocks to credit markets, the banking sector, and the wider economy.[53]
Foreclosure crises
[edit]Many homebuyers purchase housing on credit in the form of a mortgage, but changing economic conditions can leave them unable to pay back their loans. Guren and McQuade (2020) argue that widespread foreclosures can interact with the housing market to amplify declines in asset prices, leading to prices below levels determined by fundamentals: "When the housing market is hit by a shock that lowers housing demand and induces some foreclosures — for example a drop in employment . . . the dynamic interactions between falling prices, defaults, and credit constraints keep growing numbers of buyers out of the market. The scarcity of buyers lowers prices, intensifies the buyers’ market, and leads to a downward price-default spiral."[54]
Asset cycles and housing crises (financial)
[edit]In addition to long-run trends driven by fundamentals, house prices are also subject to asset cycles. Economists debate the causes of these cycles, but have studied links to changing beliefs about asset prices, broader economic conditions, credit constraints, and interactions with mortgage lenders. As part of an asset cycle, house prices can rise above levels determined by fundamentals ("Housing bubble"). During a correction, a financial-housing crisis can occur in the context of a downward price-foreclosure spiral. This "price-foreclosure spiral . . . pushes prices below their long-run level" leading to patterns such as the boom-bust-rebound of the 2000s housing cycle.[55] These foreclosure crises can have significant consequences for the wider economy.
See also
[edit]References
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- ^ a b Hilber; Schöni (May 2022). "Housing policy and affordable housing" (PDF). London School of Economics: Centre for Economic Performance, Occasional Paper (56).
- ^ "What Can Be Done About the Global Housing Crisis? Plenty". Wired. 2022-04-24. Archived from the original on 2022-04-24. Retrieved 2023-12-30.
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- ^ a b Dettmer, Jamie; Cancryn, Adam; Hartog, Eva; Taylor-Vaisey, Nick (August 3, 2024). "Priced out of housing, many younger disillusioned voters embrace populism". Politico.
- ^ Derby, Michael S. (September 27, 2022). "Fed's Harker says housing shortage a key inflation driver". Reuters.
- ^ O'Donnell, Katy; Guida, Victoria (November 10, 2021). "Biden's next inflation threat: The rent is too damn high". Politico.
Housing costs just posted one of their largest monthly gains in decades, and many economists expect them to loom large in inflation figures over the next year heading into the 2022 midterm elections. It's not just economists — the Federal Reserve Bank of New York said in research released Monday that Americans on average expect rents to rise 10.1 percent over the next year, the highest reading in the survey's history.
- ^ Bahney, Bryan Mena, Anna (2024-03-08). "Biden says he can fix America's housing affordability crisis. Will it work? | CNN Business". CNN. Retrieved 2024-07-24.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell in testimony this week said a growing housing shortage is likely to result in continued housing inflation.
{{cite web}}
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But when it comes to the single biggest driver of runaway prices, Washington's hands are mostly tied. Skyrocketing housing costs may create even bigger problems for the administration going forward than oil and food price spikes, which are the result of sudden and unforeseen — but probably temporary — events. That's because there's no clear end in sight for shelter inflation.
- ^ a b Boak, Josh (2024-03-15). "Why are so many voters frustrated by the US economy? It's home prices". AP News. Archived from the original on 2024-09-09. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
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- ^ "Rental Housing: As More Households Rent, the Poorest Face Affordability and Housing Quality Challenges" (PDF). United States Government Accountability Office. May 2020. Archived (PDF) from the original on Apr 24, 2023.
- ^ a b Glaeser, Edward L. (2020). "The Closing of America's Urban Frontier". Cityscape. 22 (2): 6. ISSN 1936-007X. JSTOR 26926891.
- ^ Smith, Jennifer (2023-10-30). "Kenzie Bok says Boston housing shortage no accident". CommonWealth Beacon. Retrieved 2023-12-30.
- ^ Bahney, Anna (2023-03-08). "The US housing market is short 6.5 million homes". CNN Business. Retrieved 2023-12-30.
- ^ "Supply Skepticism Revisited: What New Research Shows About the Impact of Supply on Affordability". furmancenter.org. Retrieved 2023-12-30.
- ^ a b c Smialek, Jeanna; DePillis, Lydia; Rodriguez, Natasha (October 11, 2024). "Trump Blames Immigrant Surge for Housing Crisis. Most Economists Disagree". New York Times.
- ^ Gregg Colburn; Clayton Page Aldern (2022-03-16). "Homelessness Is a Housing Problem". Sightline Institute. Retrieved 2023-12-29.
- ^ Tobias Peter (September 16, 2024). "The Opportunity Cost of McMansionization in the Los Angeles Metro". Metropolitan Abundance Project.
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- ^ "Why Is America Still Falling Short on Affordable Housing?". Architectural Digest. 2023-12-28. Retrieved 2023-12-29.
- ^ "Permanent Supportive Housing as a Solution to Homelessness: The Critical Role of Long-Term Operating Subsidies" (PDF).
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