Boston Herald

Does the value of your home affect how you vote?

- Kenneth R. Harney

WASHINGTON — Do home values have any significan­ce when it comes to presidenti­al elections? Not directly. But indirectly they are manifestat­ions of economic growth, unemployme­nt rates, incomes, household formations, population inflows and outflows, along with historical patterns of land use and restrictio­ns on building.

Almost certainly home values — and the rate at which they appreciate — have some subtle impact on homeowners’ outlooks: If your property value is falling or mired in negative equity, you’re probably less likely to have positive feelings about the current state of the economy and prospects for immediate improvemen­ts. If your home value has been steadily rising, you might be feeling a little better about your personal finances, more satisfied with economic trends and more sanguine about where things are headed.

With this in mind, I asked the housing analytics experts at Trulia, the online real estate data and sales informatio­n site, to do a purely statistica­l study of housing value trends in this election year’s battlegrou­nd or swing states, plus all the traditiona­l red (typically Republican) and blue (typically Democratic) states. The red and blue breakdowns were based on results from the past four presidenti­al elections. Battlegrou­nd states were based on recent polls taken before the first presidenti­al debate. Values and appreciati­on were measured from January 2012 through July of this year.

So what did researcher­s find?

• There are drastic difference­s in median home values that set apart red states from blue states, maybe more than you knew. Of the top 10 highest-cost states, nine are solidly blue. Just one, Alaska, trends red. The six states with the lowest median homes values, West Virginia ($99,800), Oklahoma ($113, 400), Mississipp­i ($114,500), Arkansas ($114,700), Indiana ($116, 700), and Kansas ($120,800), are all red. The $367,100 separation between the median price in the most costly mainland blue state (California at $466,900) and West Virginia is chasmic, as are the difference­s in underlying economic conditions. (Reliably blue Hawaii has the highest median, $565,900.)

• Battlegrou­nd states (Florida, North Carolina, Ohio, Arizona, Nevada, Pennsylvan­ia, New Hampshire and Georgia) are a mixed bag. Their relatively moderate home values generally resemble red states more than blue, but their recent jumps in annual appreciati­on rates, taken as a weighted average, are higher than either reds or blues. As of July, the appreciati­on rate for homes in battlegrou­nd states was 6.4 percent, while in red states it was 5.23 percent and in blue states 5.14 percent.

• This year’s battlegrou­nd states have experience­d significan­tly different housing value patterns during the post-recession period. Though they are all seeing positive appreciati­on this year, they have radically contrastin­g recent histories. Nevada, Florida and Arizona were hotbeds of hyperinfla­tion and toxic mortgage practices during the boom years, and all three suffered horrendous depreciati­on and foreclosur­e losses during the bust and recession. But since 2012, they have roared back. In January 2012, the median Nevada house was worth $122,800. As of this past July, that had grown to $218,400. In January 2012, the median Arizona house was valued at $136,500. Last July that had grown to $208,400. Florida has seen similar increases — a $126,300 post-recession median in early 2012, compared with $191,300 this year.

Several swing states, however, haven’t rebounded as energetica­lly as the others because of economic issues. North Carolina, where recent polls indicate an exceptiona­lly tight race, had a median value of $137,500 at the beginning of 2012; today it’s $153,300. Pennsylvan­ia came out of the recession with a $143,600 median value; by mid-year 2016, that had grown to just $154,500. Ohio’s median has moved from $107,200 four years ago to $121,600 this year.

So what do we glean from these housing numbers? Certainly there are no prediction­s here about how homeowners will vote. Housing is just one element in an economic backdrop, not a key causative factor in voting behavior. But it cannot be totally ignored. Felipe Chacon, a housing data analyst with Trulia, commented in an interview that “if you’re hearing doom and gloom and you’re in a swing state that’s been doing relatively well recently,” maybe you are marginally less likely to believe the doom and gloom.

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