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The Housing Market ‘Reset’ and its Implications for Housing Policy Alan Mallach Non-resident Senior Fellow The Brookings Institution.

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Presentation on theme: "The Housing Market ‘Reset’ and its Implications for Housing Policy Alan Mallach Non-resident Senior Fellow The Brookings Institution."— Presentation transcript:

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2 The Housing Market ‘Reset’ and its Implications for Housing Policy Alan Mallach Non-resident Senior Fellow The Brookings Institution

3 Subprime lending exploded

4 Housing production outstripped household formation New Units Authorized Increase in occupied housing units Source: Bureau of the Census Between 1999 and 2009 6.9 million more housing units were approved than the number of additional house- holds

5 Prices took off, and then fell Las Vegas

6 Foreclosures skyrocketed Source: Mortgage Bankers Association 14% of all mortgages are delinquent or in foreclosure In foreclosure Delinquent but not in foreclosure

7 New housing production fell Las Vegas metro area new units authorized by quarter 2005 through 2010 Source: Bureau of the Census

8 Homeownership rates have declined Source: Bureau of the Census

9 Tenure patterns have shifted significantly Nearly 3 million more renters Net loss of homeowners Source: Bureau of the Census

10 the “shadow inventory” is growing 1.8 million mortgages 3.4 million mortgages 570,000 mortgages 240,000 mortgages Source: OCC Mortgage Metrics

11 Nearly 25% of all mortgages are underwater % of mortgages underwater in 3 rd quarter 2009 – top five states and United States

12 Vacancy rates have risen and remain elevated

13 ................ 50-100% above national median. More than double national median Housing is affordable almost everywhere Source: National Association of Realtors, median sales price of existing single-family homes 2009

14 Earnings have stagnated Real average weekly earnings 1947 to 2007 (2007 dollars) Source: Economic Policy Institute $622.81 $386.55 $589.72

15 Unemployment rates are elevated Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, April of each year seasonally adjusted 17.1% 9.9%

16 Consumer confidence is at historically low levels

17 Manufacturing jobs are disappearing Manufacturing employment in the United States 1964-2009 Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics 15.9M 19.4M 17.3M 11.9M

18 Household formations have declined Average annual increase 2000-2005 = 1,122,000 Average Annual Increase 2005-2009 = 631,000 Source: American Community Survey

19 Where is the rental housing? 3/4 of all private market rentals are in 1 to 9 unit properties

20 Who is the target population for affordable housing? Category (Federal definition) Income range Income range in Las-Vegas MSA (family of four) Affordable rental range Household share Low income50 to 80% of median $32,501- $52,000 $800-$1300 per month 16% of households Very low income 30 to 50% of median $19,501- $32,500 $500-$800 per month 11% of households Extremely low income 0 to 30% of median $0-$19,500Under $500 per month 13% of households

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