Lingering Problems from the Deflation of the Housing Bubble

RSS Author RSS     Views:N/A
Bookmark and Share          Republish
As with any illness, the recovery is often plagued by symptoms of the disease and unwanted side effects. The recovery from the Great Housing Bubble will be no exception. The main problems will be experienced by those who bought at peak prices and did not go through the cleansing foreclosure process. As painful as foreclosure is to those who must endure it, foreclosure is the cure to the disease of the market. After foreclosure, a borrower is no longer burdened by high housing payments, and is free to move to find new work and spend income on consumer goods.

Houses will become America's new debtor's prisons. By the end of 2008, anyone who purchased between 2004 and 2007 will be underwater. Everyone who is underwater and making crushing home payments will be stuck in their homes until values climb back above their purchase price. Since there are a great many people in these circumstances and since each of these people are in at a different price point, each one will have a different term in debtor's prison, but when their sentence is up, many will opt to sell to get out from under the crushing payments.


Each of these people selling their homes keep prices from rising. This is impact of overhead supply. It is also why the market will not see meaningful appreciation without capitulatory selling. People trapped in their homes cannot move to accept promotions or advancements in their careers, and people who are making large debt service payments have less discretionary income to spend. In an economy heavily dependent upon consumer spending, the impact of this loss of spending power will serve as a drag on economic growth. Aside from the broader economic ramifications, the heavily indebted will need to adjust to a lifestyle within their available after-tax and after-debt income. This will be a disheartening adjustment to many, particularly those who had become dependent upon mortgage equity withdrawal to sustain their lifestyles.

The Great Housing Bubble was a financial mania. The inefficient use of resources and economic maladjustments will take decades to unwind. With government programs and Federal Reserve intervention, we may never again see a free market at work in the US housing market.Lawrence Roberts is the author of The Great Housing Bubble: Why Did House Prices Fall?

Learn more and get FREE eBooks at: http://www.thegreathousingbubble.com/
Read the author's daily dispatches at The Irvine Housing Blog: http://www.irvinehousingblog.com/ Visit Lingering Problems from the Deflation of the Housing Bubble.

Report this article

Bookmark and Share
Republish



Ask a Question about this Article