Las Vegas Review-Journal

Home prices have voters frustrated with the nation’s economy

- By Josh Boak

WASHINGTON — Lori Shelton can’t fathom ever having the money to buy a home — and that’s a major reason why so many voters feel down on the economy ahead of this year’s presidenti­al election.

Shelton, 67, drives an Uber to help pay rent in Aurora, Colo. An advance on her pay covered her apartment’s security deposit. But it also cut into her next paycheck, leaving her bank account dangerousl­y low when the rent was due — a cycle that never seems to end.

“I’m always one step behind,” said Shelton, her voice choking up. “It’s a nightmare, it’s a freaking nightmare right now.”

The United States is slogging through a housing affordabil­ity crisis that was decades in the making. At the root of this problem: America failed to build enough homes for its growing population. The shortage strikes at the heart of the American dream of homeowners­hip — dampening President Joe Biden’s assurances that the U.S. economy is strong and underscori­ng the degree to which Republican Donald Trump, the former president and presumptiv­e GOP nominee for 2024, has largely overlooked the shortage.

The lack of housing has caused a record number of renters to devote an excessive amount of income to housing, according to a Harvard University analysis. Not enough homes are for sale or being built, keeping prices elevated. Average mortgage rates have more than doubled and further worsened affordabil­ity.

In fact, the Census Bureau reported that homeowners­hip fell slightly at the end of last year in an otherwise solid economy. If it wasn’t for shelter costs, inflation — Biden’s most pronounced economic problem — would be running at a healthy and stable 1.8%. Instead, it’s hovering around 3.2%.

Administra­tion officials are confident that shelter inflation will soon cool, but the damage across several years is apparent to advocates and economists.

“I’ve been doing housing work for 30 years — the housing affordabil­ity challenge is the worst I’ve ever seen in my career,” said Shaun Donovan, a former secretary of Housing and Urban Developmen­t in the Obama years who now leads the nonprofit Enterprise Community Partners.

Donovan noted that this is an increasing­ly bipartisan challenge that could bring the political parties together. Expensive housing was once the domain of Democratic areas such as New York City and San Francisco. It’s now moved into Republican states as places such as Boise, Idaho, grapple with higher prices.

“It is a first-tier issue almost everywhere,” he said. “And that is changing the national politics around it in a way that

I think is quite different than I’ve ever seen.”

Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, said the outcome of the November election could ultimately depend on the path of 30-year mortgage rates.

Rates currently average about 6.74%. If they dropped closer to 6%, the odds of a Biden victory would increase. But rates moving near 8% might enable Trump to prevail, Zandi said.

“Given the current housing affordabil­ity crisis, higher rates will make owning a home completely out of reach for nearly all potential first-time homebuyers,” he said. “Since homeowners­hip is a key part of the American dream, if it appears unattainab­le, this will deeply impact voters’ sense of the economy.”

Biden, a Democrat, acknowledg­ed the pain many are feeling in his State of the Union address this month and in his budget proposal released Monday.

The president wants to fund the building and preservati­on of 2 million housing units — a meaningful sum, but not enough to solve the shortage. He also proposed a tax credit worth up to $10,000 to homebuyers. Over the past three years, he has increased rental assistance to 100,000 households.

“The bottom line is we have to build, build, build,” Biden said Monday in a speech to the National League of Cities. “That’s how we bring down housing costs for good.”

Rapidly climbing home prices were also a festering problem under Trump, who first achieved celebrity status as a real estate developer. While president, Trump called for limiting constructi­on in the suburbs. He claimed during the 2020 election that Biden’s policies to spur building and affordabil­ity would “destroy your neighborho­od.”

During the 2018 to 2020 years of Trump’s presidency, the country’s housing shortage surged 52% to 3.8 million units, according to the mortgage company Freddie Mac.

The Associated Press contacted Trump’s campaign for his policy plans but did not get a response. The America First Policy Institute, a think tank promoting Trump’s vision, said the key is to cut government borrowing to reduce mortgage rates. The former president has pledged to reduce deficits, but an analysis by the Committee for a Responsibl­e Federal Budget shows that his policies in office will have likely added more than $8 trillion to the national debt.

“The best way for us to improve access to homeowners­hip for young people is to get interest rates back down, not to provide subsidies that cause housing unaffordab­ility to worsen,” said Mike Faulkender, chief economist at the institute.

Lower rates might play well with voters, but most economists say they would at best offer temporary financial relief. Purchase prices would likely adjust upward in response to greater demand from falling rates.

Constructi­on, the more enduring solution, would take years to achieve and require new rules by states and cities. The administra­tion is trying to incentiviz­e zoning changes, but the major choices are outside the White House’s control.

“Even as incomes are going up and the economy is doing well and inflation is coming down, people can’t buy homes,” said Daryl Fairweathe­r, chief economist at the brokerage Redfin. “That’s like the biggest problem for Biden because it’s not one that he can solve.”

The general rule of thumb is that people should pay no more than 30% of their income on rent or a mortgage. A typical household looking to buy a home would have to devote 41% of its income to mortgage payments, according to Redfin.

There are far-reaching economic risks because of this. High housing costs can lead people to cut back spending elsewhere. Advocates said it enables landlords to neglect their properties since there is always a ready tenant.

Evictions can worsen health and educationa­l outcomes for children, exacting an even wider cost on society, said Zach Neumann, a Denver-based lawyer who provides more than $30 million annually in rental assistance through the nonprofit Community Economic Defense Project.

The cumulative costs of evicting poorer renters are “$20,000 to $30,000 a year when you include shelter nights and emergency room visits,” Neumann said. “It’s really overwhelmi­ng when you think about the total numbers, and these folks are fighting to have a roof over their heads.”

While there is bipartisan agreement on the need for more housing, there has yet to be a significan­t plan that has passed the House and Senate. Biden has proposed housing aid throughout his administra­tion that never materializ­ed.

“Had Congress passed some of the investment­s that the president has called for since the beginning of the administra­tion, had they done that three years ago, as he was advocating, we’d have affordable units coming online right now,” said Daniel Hornung, deputy director of the White House National Economic Council.

But Mark Calabria, who was director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency during the Trump administra­tion, said many of the federal tools to increase housing, such as the Low-income Housing Tax Credit, could further push up demand without adding enough constructi­on.

“My worry would be we’ve done a number of things that increased demand when the problem is supply,” said Calabria, now an adviser with the libertaria­n Cato Institute.

But for renters such as Lori Shelton in Colorado, the debate about how to add housing supply is cold comfort when she owes rent now. She’s previously dealt with the threat of eviction and late fees. She gets some rent money from her son, but she has also relied at times on her church to cover the $2,399 a month.

“I don’t think the majority of us have that savings account,” she said. “If you spend that much on your rent and your groceries and your car and your bills, you don’t have much for a fallback.”

 ?? MATT ROURKE / ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE (2023) ?? A home under constructi­on is marked as “sold” at a developmen­t in Eagleville, Pa., on April 28, 2023. The United States is slogging through a housing affordabil­ity crisis that was decades in the making.
MATT ROURKE / ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE (2023) A home under constructi­on is marked as “sold” at a developmen­t in Eagleville, Pa., on April 28, 2023. The United States is slogging through a housing affordabil­ity crisis that was decades in the making.

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