Oct 112007
 

In the midst of the U.S. hous­ing crisis, Paul Ked­rosky asks, quite reas­on­ably, Why Do We Want People to Own Homes? I’ve been won­der­ing that myself. Is it because people think houses are a good invest­ment? Because they have sen­ti­ment­al attach­ments to the idea of own­ing the roof over their head? Because they want to be sure no-one can toss them out of their home? Because every­one else does?

I remem­ber years ago in Aus­tralia (where almost every­one also wants to own their own home) talk­ing to a Ger­man immig­rant who com­plained bit­terly that he could­n’t rent any­where nice to live and so he had to buy a house. He would have been much hap­pi­er rent­ing, as people com­monly do in Ger­many. Maybe the rent­al prop­er­ties are bet­ter in Ger­many because so many people rent, or maybe part of it is because in Ger­many it’s com­mon to make modi­fic­a­tions to an apart­ment you rent, for example by renov­at­ing the kit­chen (you own the appli­ances, the cab­in­ets, etc, and take them with you if you move). People often rent the same apart­ment for 20 years or more, which is longer than many people in North Amer­ica stay in houses they buy, so it’s worth their time and effort to make it a nice place to live.

Dif­fer­ent coun­tries, dif­fer­ent ideas. For us ten years ago, there were a couple of reas­ons to buy rather than rent. We saw it as a reas­on­able invest­ment, we wanted to live in a house with a garden, and I wanted a couple of cats. So buy­ing made sense (many land­lords don’t like pets).

As house prices climb to the extent that it’s ques­tion­able how good an invest­ment they are (how high can they keep going?), it’ll be inter­est­ing to see what hap­pens. Here in Van­couver house prices have been rising to the extent that many land­lords are selling the rent­al houses to people who ren­ov­ate and move in them­selves, rather than rent­ing them out. For fam­il­ies with chil­dren in loc­al schools, hav­ing the land­lord sell the house out from under them is extremely dis­rupt­ive, espe­cially when they can afford to rent, but can­’t afford to buy, in the area they’re liv­ing in. From the land­lord’s per­spect­ive, they’re cash­ing in on the cap­it­al gains rather than tak­ing a rent that just can­’t com­pare as a return on their invest­ment. Either the house prices will have to come down, or the rents will have to go up, unless people are will­ing to con­tin­ue to gamble on mak­ing their money from cap­it­al gains.

And in the U.S., own­ing the house does­n’t mean someone can­’t turf you out if you default on a pay­ment or two. The Eco­nom­ist has an art­icle in this week’s magazine about the U.S. hous­ing crisis, point­ing out that fore­clos­ure pro­ceed­ings can take months in some states, but less than a month in Texas. Which makes me won­der even more why people buy­ing houses they could­n’t afford did­n’t rent instead.

  6 Responses to “Owning Homes”

  1. One of the main reas­ons that people in Ger­many prefer to rent is that own­ing prop­erty in Ger­many is out­rageously expens­ive. There are (vir­tu­ally) no tax advant­ages, since the mort­gage interest of prop­erty you own is not tax deductible. 

    On the oth­er side, loan interest on prop­er­ties you rent out *is* deduct­ible, so that rather absurd situ­ations can arise: a friend of mine used to live on the second floor of a 3‑family/3‑floor house (she ren­ted). The people above her owned the condo on the first floor, while the people below her owned the condo on the third floor. This was *sig­ni­fic­antly* cheap­er for both parties. 

    The irony of this situ­ation is, that almost 80% of the people between 16 and 29 dream of own­ing a house or condo by the time they turn 30. All to often, this does not hap­pen: the own/rent ratio is approx­im­ately 20/80.

  2. I’m not con­vinced the tax-deduct­ib­il­ity of the mort­gage interest is a sig­ni­fic­ant factor — many people own homes in Aus­tralia, Canada, and the U.K. where mort­gage interest for prop­er­ties you live in also isn’t tax-deduct­ible. See http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/05/magazine/305deduction.1.html for some rel­ev­ant dis­cus­sion on this point.

  3. Anoth­er import­ant issue is how much money you will receive from your pension/superannuation/investments when you retire. In Ger­many, the pen­sions were (when I lived there) based on how much you were earn­ing when you retired, so you would receive enough money to con­tin­ue rent­ing the same place.
    By con­trast, Aus­trali­an pen­sions were nev­er high enough to allow that, so you had to buy your own home or (likely) be forced out of your home when you retired. For the record, my par­ents ren­ted until my fath­er retired, and they had enough money at that stage to then buy a house out­right without a mortgage.
    Cheers, Tony.

  4. I took the fif­teen year mort­gage after refin­an­cing on the home I had built. It works out because I will have a home I can­’t be forced out of unless I can­’t work for the next six years.

    It got scary last year when I was unem­ployed for ten months. This is one of the catches some employ­ers depend on to keep one doing some­thing they would rather not, so one has to bal­ance neces­sit­ies and income care­fully. In this case, it was a choice of own­ing stock in a com­pany I don’t think we stay highly val­ued vs the mort­gage. It was an easy choice if a risky strategy. Once paid off, the risks are easi­er but more fre­quent and unex­pec­ted: the cost of aging — med­ic­al, kids get more expens­ive to keep as pets, and so on. So anoth­er way to look at this is which assets does one think they should secure first.

  5. In Nor­way, most people own their own houses. Here, the mort­gage interest is tax-deduct­ible and rent­ing home is usu­ally almost just as expens­ive as pay­ing a mort­gage, so the com­mon advice is to get into the home-buy­er-mar­ket as soon as possible.

    I think own­ing a home makes sense. Instead of pay­ing for prop­erty someone else will gain all the bene­fits from, as well as pos­sibly help­ing the own­er increase his profits on it (by paintin, refur­nish­ing, etc), it sounds more logic­al to put that money into some­thing that you can reap the bene­fits from.

    Most places in Nor­way a house will increase in value over time and there usu­ally isn’t much of a prob­lem get­ting one sold. So if you live in a house for 5 years and man­age to reduce the mort­gage by 5% dur­ing that time, plus sell for 20% more than what you bought it for, you’re out with a pretty sig­ni­fic­ant profit and can lever­age that when “upgrad­ing” to your next home.

  6. A house to me seems a huge liab­il­ity. Ive made a good liv­ing of buy­ing off plan prop­er­ties in boom­ing areas and then selling them before com­ple­tion. I belive this is called flip­ping and sup­posed to be bad. But in all ive owned over 50 appart­ments and 6 houses. Im in my 30s and can retire now, still i live in a ren­ted flat. Everytime i think of buy­ing a house, i just think how much more a smart invest­ment can make.… I guess 1 day i will buy com­pleted houses out­right and rent them out, but it just seems so easy to make money of plan… i dont lim­it my invest­ments to any­where geo­graph­icaly. Dubai and Abu Dhabi have been good recently, china and india and brazil look sure bets in the future…

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