New York Times complains about lack of affordable "starter homes"

Discussion in 'Economics & Trade' started by kazenatsu, Sep 25, 2022.

  1. kazenatsu

    kazenatsu Well-Known Member Past Donor

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    The New York Times published an article lamenting the lack of affordable "starter" homes.
    It admits that one of the main reasons is land prices.

    This just goes with what I've been saying all along. The cause is immigration. Immigration leads to overcrowding in the already more densely populated areas where people want to live and where the job opportunities are concentrated. This drives land and home prices up.

    The overall population replacement rate in the U.S. had already entered into negative territory. The only reason the population numbers continue to grow is because of immigration from other foreign countries.

    Ironically the New York Times is complaining about this, even though they support mass immigration.

    I believe one big part of the reason that that Americans are having fewer children--especially middle class Americans--is due to the fact that houses have become unaffordable to young families.

    When you think about it, most children come from a very specific demographic of the population: women between the ages of 20 and 30. (The median age of childbirth in the U.S. is about 26 ) With the parents not having had time to establish themselves yet in their careers, these are families that usually can't afford to buy a house costing $400 or $500,000. Indeed, many American women now fear that if they have children before the age of 30 they might not have time to establish a career.

    (Of course ironically affordability problems are more likely to make the middle class postpone having children rather than families with lower income backgrounds, who have lower expectations and may still likely choose to have children even if they are living in a small apartment and there is no yard for their children to play in and their children will not have separate bedrooms)


    (I will copy the article here for three reasons. They have recently made the article available for free on MSN. The link will probably not continue to work for very long. Some people may have a slower internet connection and have trouble accessing the site.)

    Whatever Happened to the Starter Home?

    As recently as the 1990s, when Jason Nageli started off, the home-building industry was still constructing what real-estate ads would brightly call the “starter home.” In the Denver area, he sold newly built two-story houses with three bedrooms in 1,400 square feet or less.
    The price: $99,000 to $125,000, or around $200,000 in today’s dollars.
    That house would be in tremendous demand today. But few builders construct anything like it anymore. And you couldn’t buy those Denver area homes built 25 years ago at an entry-level price today, either. They go for half a million dollars.
    The disappearance of such affordable homes is central to the American housing crisis. The nation has a deepening shortage of housing. But, more specifically, there isn’t enough of this housing: small, no-frills homes that would give a family new to the country or a young couple with student debt a foothold to build equity.
    The affordable end of the market has been squeezed from every side. Land costs have risen steeply in booming parts of the country. Construction materials and government fees have become more expensive. And communities nationwide are far more prescriptive today than decades ago about what housing should look like and how big it must be. Some ban vinyl siding. Others require two-car garages. Nearly all make it difficult to build the kind of home that could sell for $200,000 today.
    "It's just become where you can’t get to that number anymore," said Mr. Nageli, now the operations manager for the Utah builder Holmes Homes.
    Nationwide, the small detached house has all but vanished from new construction. Only about 8 percent of new single-family homes today are 1,400 square feet or less. In the 1940s, according to CoreLogic, nearly 70 percent of new houses were that small.
    Those starter homes came in all kinds over the years: mill worker’s cottages, shotgun homes, bungalows, ramblers, split-levels, two-bedroom tract homes. American families also found their start in brick rowhouses, cozy duplexes and triple-deckers.
    But the economics of the housing market -- and the local rules that shape it -- have dictated today that many small homes are replaced by McMansions, or that their moderate-income residents are replaced by wealthier ones. (A little 1948 Levittown house on Long Island, the prototypical postwar suburban starter home, now goes with a few updates for $550,000.)
    At the root is the math problem of putting -- or keeping -- a low-cost home on increasingly pricey land.
    "When we started out 20 or so years ago, we could buy a lot for $10,000-$15,000, and we could build a home for under $100,000," said Mary Lawler, the head of Avenue Community Development Corporation in Houston, a nonprofit developer. "It was a totally different world than we are in today."
    In Portland, Ore., a lot may cost $100,000. Permits add $40,000-$50,000. Removing a fir tree 36 inches in diameter costs another $16,000 in fees.
    "You've basically regulated me out of anything remotely on the affordable side," said Justin Wood, the owner of Fish Construction NW.
    In Savannah, Georgia, Jerry Konter began building three-bed, two-bath, 1,350-square-foot homes in 1977 for $36,500. But he moved upmarket as costs and design mandates pushed him there.
    "It's not that I don’t want to build entry-level homes," said Mr. Konter, the chairman of the National Association of Home Builders. "It's that I can’t produce one that I can make a profit on and sell to that potential purchaser."
    That reality conflicts with demographics. The typical American household has fallen in size for decades, even as the typical home has grown larger. Downsizing baby boomers and young adults who delay children figure to drive demand for smaller homes. So will increasingly diverse young buyers who have more debt and less access to family wealth.
    These shifts may force communities, builders and buyers to rethink what a starter home looks like. In places where even small single-family houses are out of reach for many, the answer might be a condo.
    Today in some parts of the country there is hardly anything on the market for under $300,000 resembling the American starter home of the last 70 years. In Raleigh, N.C., entering this weekend there were 17 such single-family homes with at least two bedrooms listed for sale. Across the Denver metro, there were six; around Salt Lake City, three.
    In Houston, Felecia Ellis has been driving around on lunch breaks from a dental clinic looking for such a home in the $200,000-$250,000 range.
    "Driving through a neighborhood, I’m like, 'Oh my god, this is a beautiful home, I know I can afford it,'" Ms. Ellis said. Then she pulls out her phone in the hopeful ritual of the first-time home buyer. The answer in the listing, more often than not, is that, in fact, she can't afford it.
    "And I’m like, 'You've got to be kidding me,'" she said. "'This house is $425,000.'"

    'It's flexible, it's malleable'

    The starter home has always done a lot of work. It builds equity, creates stability, gives shelter from landlords and inflation. It has been an incubator of small businesses and community institutions like day care centers. And in an earlier form and time, it was more adaptable. Just add a bathroom when indoor plumbing arrived, a second unit to collect rental income, a garage once cars became common.
    "It's flexible, it's malleable, and it allows for improvement, investment and change over time," said Marta Gutman, dean of the City College of New York's Spitzer School of Architecture.
    In the early 20th century, communities were effectively using all kinds of models to solve for affordable, entry-level housing. But the arrival of the car enabled people to move further out, and new planning ideas declared what would be built there.
    "That allowed us to say, 'Forget all those other typologies -- a starter home is going to be a two-bedroom detached house on a 7,500-square-foot lot,'" said Nolan Gray, the research director at California YIMBY, as in the opposite of NIMBY.
    For a long time, that suburban model worked, although only for white families at first. But the economics and the politics shifted as the land within a reasonable driving distance of downtown filled in.
    Land grew more expensive. But communities didn’t respond by allowing housing on smaller pieces of it. They broadly did the opposite, ratcheting up rules that ensured builders couldn’t construct smaller, more affordable homes. They required pricier materials and minimum home sizes. They wanted architectural flourishes, not flat facades.
    "Local communities in the last 30 to 40 years have gotten really good at this -- way better than they used to be," Joseph Gyourko, a professor at the Wharton School of Business, said of rules that restrict development that neighbors don't like.
    This mix of good intentions (energy efficiency, tree preservation) and exclusionary ones (aesthetic mandates, minimum lot sizes) has pushed up the cost of building on top of the rising cost of land. Cities have also shifted more of the burden for funding public infrastructure like parks and sewer systems off taxpayers and onto homebuilders.
    The result today is that a builder who can put up only one home on an expensive piece of land will construct a large, expensive one.
    Another result is that more affordable homes built decades ago are less likely to stay that way. A small house now sitting on land worth $500,000 will make sense mostly as a tear-down. A family earning $150,000 a year will compete with a family earning $60,000 when there are so few entry-level homes to buy.
    "They still have the starter home," said Ed Pinto, director of the A.E.I. Housing Center, pointing to pricey Santa Clara County, California. "They still have the 1954 1,200-square-foot rambler."
    It now sells for $1.4 million.
    Or take the early 1900s bungalows in the Greater Heights area of Houston. Many were cheap rental housing in the 1990s, with chain-link fences and dismal carpeting.
    "When you removed the chain-link fence, pulled back the carpet, and painted the walls back to white, these are charming homes which today we sell for $600,000-$800,000," said Bill Baldwin, a local broker and city planning commissioner.
    Houston has relatively lax land-use restrictions, and reduced minimum lot sizes have enabled a townhome boom. But it’s not immune to rising costs, either.
    One last result of these forces is that investors who surged into the housing market during the pandemic have become attracted to entry-level houses, too. These houses are more reliable as rental properties than high-end homes would be. They can house, after all, the renters who can’t afford to buy them.

    Building a dependency over decades

    The simplest way to put entry-level housing on increasingly expensive land is to build a lot of it -- to put two, three, four or more units on lots that for decades have been reserved for one home.
    The outcome would look more like housing built a century ago, with more duplexes, more rowhouses, more homeowners adding their own rental units.
    "We need to shift our culture away from this dependency on single-family detached housing, and thinking it’s the only solution," said Daniel Parolek, an architect and author of a book on "missing middle" housing.
    Mr. Parolek worked with the Utah builder, Holmes Homes, to design one model outside Salt Lake City. They rotated the more typical rowhouse on its side, attaching small two-story homes along an intimate pedestrian path. The homes first came on the market in 2015 at about $200,000.
    "It was a home run the minute we built them," Mr. Nageli said. But costs have risen even since then. And the builder hasn't repeated the concept elsewhere because most communities wouldn't allow it.
    From a builder's view, there’s nothing particularly preferable about higher-end homes. Their profit margins aren't generally higher. They demand more customization. They're riskier to build in economic downtimes. Entry-level housing, on the other hand, is invariably in deep demand.
    If more communities permitted it, builders would return to that end of the market, Mr. Nageli said.
    "We would be thriving in it," he said.
    In Portland, where Mr. Wood has long tried to build entry-level single-family homes, zoning reforms now allow multiple units on what were previously single-family lots. Today Mr. Wood is pursuing permits for his first triplexes and fourplexes.
    "In 2022, we started our last single-family detached homes in Portland," he said. "I do not think we will ever do it again."​

    The New York Times, Emily Badger, September 25, 2022
    https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/25/upshot/starter-home-prices.html#:~:text=Nationwide, the small detached house,new houses were that small.
     
    Last edited: Sep 25, 2022
  2. Joe knows

    Joe knows Well-Known Member

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    Californians made my area unaffordable not illegal immigrants. But I do have an honest question. Can illegal immigrants actually own land in the US?
     
  3. kazenatsu

    kazenatsu Well-Known Member Past Donor

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    Why do you think so many Californians moved away and came to your area?

    Are you aware of the phenomena called "chain migration"? A group of people move from area A to area B. That then pushes the people out of area B and they move to area C.
    Read about how the Huns contributed to the collapse of the Roman Empire. Their invasions caused other barbarian groups to flee their homelands and start making incursions into Roman territory. It is an indirect effect.
     
    Last edited: Sep 25, 2022
  4. modernpaladin

    modernpaladin Well-Known Member Past Donor

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    Not sure. But they can qualify for subsidized low income rentals, which increases the overall demand for rentals and thus increases the cost of rent, and also makes it more lucrative for investment firms to buy houses and rent them out.
     
    Last edited: Sep 26, 2022
  5. kazenatsu

    kazenatsu Well-Known Member Past Donor

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    The influx of people into your area is being caused (albeit indirectly) by international immigration. You just do not realize it because those people appear to be white.
     
    Last edited: Sep 26, 2022
  6. modernpaladin

    modernpaladin Well-Known Member Past Donor

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    Thats pretty much what the part you edited out said... I don't understand why people do that...
     
  7. Melb_muser

    Melb_muser Well-Known Member Donor

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    OP: Wow, you're at it again? Absolutely zero about immigration in the article. Nice try.

    Any evidence for YOUR immigration thesis that you've sprinkled amidst the NYT article about housing affordability? NYT attributes other reasons that you have not bothered to mention.
     
    Last edited: Sep 26, 2022
  8. FatBack

    FatBack Well-Known Member

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    I believe it's simple logic.
     
  9. kazenatsu

    kazenatsu Well-Known Member Past Donor

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    Unlike you, I do not rely on the media to dictate what I should think.

    How about some independent logic and critical thinking?

    You seem to believe there could not be a probable cause for something unless the media tells us it is so?
     
    Last edited: Sep 26, 2022
  10. kazenatsu

    kazenatsu Well-Known Member Past Donor

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    Maybe you would like to tell us what you think is the cause of the shortage of affordable starter homes and rising land prices?

    For one thing, more homes would not have to be constructed if there were not more people. Isn't that true?

    Around where I have lived, all of the newest home developments are built on tiny lot sizes, packed together like sardines. And I mean ALL of them. That should be a little concerning, shouldn't it?
    They are even building some condos but the units are NOT "affordable". (Unless you think a monthly mortgage payment of $2,250 constitutes "affordable" for a condo)
     
    Last edited: Sep 26, 2022
  11. kazenatsu

    kazenatsu Well-Known Member Past Donor

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    "An immigration inflow equal to 1% of a city's population is associated with increases in average rents and housing values of about 1%. The results suggest an economic impact that is an order of magnitude bigger than that found in labor markets."
    Immigration and Housing Rents in American Cities, Albert Saiz, University of Pennsylvania, Wharton, June 2003
    https://repository.upenn.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1012&context=real-estate_papers#:~:text=An immigration inflow equal to,that found in labor markets
     
    Last edited: Sep 26, 2022

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