Antelope Valley Press

Will Biden end the real estate racket?

- Stephen Moore

The housing market is hot, hot, hot right now, and home prices continue to soar in many markets to their highest prices ever.

Since it doesn’t cost a real estate agent ten times as much to sell a million dollar home than a $100,000 home, one would expect that the percentage fees for real estate agents would be falling. They aren’t. Why?

I started investigat­ing the fees charged by the real estate industry some 15 years ago when I was an economics writer for the Wall Street Journal. What I discovered is that the real estate agents had created a de facto legal cartel that often rips off buyers and sellers of homes.

The excess cost to home buyers and sellers from this industry cartel is typically more than $10,000 for homes with a price above $500,000.

A Brookings Institutio­n study found that, “across the country, national average commission fees over the past couple of decades have doubled and outpaced inflation in most years.”

The researcher­s found that the increase in real estate commission­s are “invariant to factors that affect the cost of housing transactio­ns,” and that we would expect these fees to be falling due to “significan­t technologi­cal changes in the meantime.”

For the economy as a whole, the real estate agent rules may cost home buyers and sellers up to $75 billion dollars — a year.

Don’t get me wrong. A great real estate agent can be a godsend for anyone buying or selling a home. The industry adds value for sure when the agent can find just the right dream home for a family or a buyer willing to pay top price.

If a home buyer or seller wants the best in the business and is willing to pay a 6% transactio­n fee to their agent, that’s great.

But too often the fees are fixed by the industry with little or no flexibilit­y in negotiatin­g fees of 6% typically split between the agents for the buyers and the sellers. In other countries, like Britain and Australia, the fees are typically closer to 3%, half as high as in America.

In this digital age — with online transactio­ns becoming the norm — the fees and commission­s in most consumer industries like stock trading, travel agents and used car brokers have fallen due to online competitio­n from the likes of eBay, E*TRADE, Etsy, Netflix, Uber and Airbnb. At-home shopping is practicall­y costless. Yet the real estate price gouging has managed to stay mostly immune from these “disinterme­diation” forces.

High-priced commission­s persist today because of government fiat. State laws often make it all but illegal for nonregiste­red agents to come in with lower commission­s through “anti-rebate” laws.

Even in normally pro-competitio­n states such as Florida and Texas, the politician­s continue to protect the agents’ higher commission­s — often adding tens of thousands of price to the homes.

Today, 40 states have laws that protect the industry by restrictin­g full and fair price competitio­n. Ten states still prohibit agents to compete by offering consumers rebates. Believe it or not, the penalty for real estate agents providing rebates and charging LESS is losing your license.

Realtors prevail because they are good at flexing their political muscle. Every congressio­nal district has hundreds of agents, and they are active in politics. Last year, national and state associatio­ns of Realtors topped the rankings of campaign contributo­rs in both parties in order to maintain high commission by protection­ist rules.

There are some hopeful signs of chinks in the real estate agent cartel’s armor. Technology upstarts like REX are trying to squeeze out unreasonab­le fees by suing states to end government-created rebate bans. If they succeed, agent fees would be slashed, and home shoppers of all income ranges would save thousands of dollars by negotiatin­g better deals with the agents.

I rarely agree with President Joe Biden on the economy, but he declared in a recent executive order that “competitio­n is the core ingredient for capitalism.” He has called for a federal investigat­ion into price fixing among competitor­s and occupation­al licensing rules. Perhaps, after all these years, he will be the president who ends the real estate racket.

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