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Today's Top News
The Low-Income Homeowner Tax
Forget about trying to get more kids health care insurance by expanding SCHIP or increasing government funding for child care. The new way the politicians plan to help moderate-income families is to have them pay a special 18 percent income tax to live in a home in which they have no equity.
Here's the deal. As we know, millions of moderate-income families are facing foreclosure on their homes because they have mortgages that they can't afford and they live in homes that are worth less than the amount on their mortgage. This is a situation where the banks would ordinarily take a huge hit since they have no hope of recouping anywhere near the amount owed on the mortgage when the home goes through the foreclosure process.
But the politicians are coming to the rescue. They want the government to step in and either guarantee or directly issue new mortgages to these homeowners. When these new mortgages are issued to pay off most or all of the prior mortgages, they will be giving the banks far more money than they can reasonably hope to get if the houses had gone through the foreclosure process.
This can be viewed as bad policy because it is giving tens of billions of taxpayer dollars to the truly rich. But it should be viewed as even worse policy because it is effectively taxing millions of low- and moderate-income families to live in homes in which they have no equity. This low-income homeowner tax can be demonstrated with simple arithmetic.
Typically, houses sell for about 14 times as much as what it would cost to rent the same unit for a year. The run-up in house prices in the bubble raised the ratio of sale price to annual rent to more than 20 to 1. While prices have begun to fall, in many areas the ratio of sale price to annual rent is still more than 20 to 1.
Working from this ratio, it is easy to see homeowners are almost certainly paying far more to stay in their houses than it would cost them to rent the same home, and these excess payments are a large share of their income.
Suppose a moderate homeowner gets a 6 percent mortgage, and then pays an additional 1 percent of the sale price each year on both tax and maintenance. This means their costs of "owning" the house is equal to 8 percent of the sale price, not counting any payments of principle on the mortgage. Since the rent of the home is just 5 percent of the sale price, the homeowner is paying 60 percent more in housing costs each year than they would if they were a renter.
Let's put numbers in this story. Suppose the house would sell for $200,000. The 20 to 1 sale to rent ratio implies it would rent for $10,000 a year or $830 a month. Instead, this homeowner is paying $12,000 a year in interest, $2,000 a year in taxes and $2,000 a year in maintenance for a total of $16,000 a year, or $1,330 per month.
This additional $6,000 a year in housing costs is likely to be large relative to the family's income. Housing costs average 30 percent of disposable income, so this sum would be equivalent to an 18 percent tax on the family's disposable income. This sum is also roughly what it would cost to insure two kids for a year, and more than enough to pay for child care for a kid for a full year.
Paying extra to own, rather than rent, a home could make sense if the homeowner was accumulating equity in the house. However, this is almost certainly not the case. House prices are falling rapidly and will likely to continue to fall until the overhang from the housing bubble is eliminated. The vast majority of moderate-income homeowners facing foreclosure will never see a dime in equity on their home. In other words, the excess housing payments are basically just a tax that gives no return whatsoever to these homeowners.
It is truly bizarre we are struggling to find ways to pay for health care and child care for kids in low-income families at the same time the government is encouraging these families to throw large amounts of money away so they can be called homeowners. Many of these families will still need help for their kids, but they would need much less if we ended the 18 percent homeowner tax. We need a housing policy designed to give people decent housing, not to fulfill ideological commitments to an "ownership society."
Dean Baker is the co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR). He is the author of The Conservative Nanny State: How the Wealthy Use the Government to Stay Rich and Get Richer ( www.conservativenannystate.org). He also has a blog, "Beat the Press," where he discusses the media's coverage of economic issues. You can find it at the American Prospect's web site.
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14 Comments so far
Show AllI think it was Orwell who suggested that the technique is to keep people just on the edge of hunger/poverty. Keep 'em running on the treadmill -- so they don't get ahead, and they don't fall off. The tyrants want us precisely in the middle. Bush went a little too far, it seems, cranked the speed up too highly, and a lot of people got tossed off the back.
Certainly that's been the strategy with real estate. If fully exposed to market dynamics, I'd expect a modest/median home in most areas to be tightly coupled to sensible ratio in relation to mostest/median earnings. But the fact that prices start out high, and only go upward from there suggests endemic racketeering, exploitation, speculation, the dynamics of usury, etc.
The Dems are probably hoping to adjust the speed again, make sure that people can get back onboard -- but certainly not ahead. After 500 years it would seem that most square acreage (equity) is held by banks, the government or larger/wealthier private family estates. You'd think by now that 90%+ of the land would be owned outright by people, passed generation to generation, even by relatively modest middle-income and lower-income people. But such is not the case. Our system seems apparently predicated on maintaining a perpetually landless working-class. The Middle Ages returneth.
I believe we've dialed back to the pre-Homestead Act era. The land wars will begin naturally, they'll emerge when you see a critical mass of homeless/hopeless people coupled with empty property. This won't be the first time the West has dealt with with this.
Adverse Possession (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adverse_possession):
"adverse possession is the process by which title to another's real property is acquired without compensation, by, as the name suggests, holding the property in a manner that conflicts with the true owner's rights for a specified period of time. Circumstances of the adverse possession determine the type of title acquired by the adverse possessor, which may be fee simple title, mineral rights, or another interest in real property."
It will be squatters who'll move in and homestead, inhabit -- and often improve -- abandoned properties. It'll be interesting to see how this plays out in the modern era, but it seems we're headed toward a replay of it.
I have mixed feeling about a 'bail out.' On the one hand, it's hard not to feel some sympathy for those losing their homes, and on the other having other taxpayers, many of whom are in a lower income bracket, help them pay for homes they could ill-afford to begin with. The best way to resolve this may be to make the sub-prime swindlers swallow most of the loss.
Captain Obvious strikes again.
Some folks are better off renting instead of buying.
There. My work is done.
Add the Federal Reserve's regressive monetary policy and these victims are headed for total financial devastation. Every time Ben Bernanke lowers interest rates, the dollar further devalues and 99% of the population has less purchasing power for basic necessities..
Had Bernanke held interest rates steady during the past year, the financial "crisis" would be bottoming out and would be short lived. Bernanke's continued interest rate cuts will result in a more severe "crisis" that will take years for these victims to pull out of. To date the interest rate cuts have helped only the big banks, not these victims.
In socal rents are often 20%-58% higher than mortgage payments. This is starting to reverse but using Baker's example, that $200K house (which doesn't exist in socal, even a modest 2 bdrm shithole costs $400K min.) may cost $1330 or whatever to "own" but that same house rents for $2100/month, not $830.
Second, in socal what are the housing "choices" for families with lower incomes? Cram into a 2 bdrm apartment or condo with no storage space in rundown neighborhoods and spend up to 60% of your income flushed down the toilet on rent or "buy" a piece-of-shit condo (because at an ave. price of $650K houses are just so far beyond reality). The illusion was the "promise" the rich brokers made the lower income population (as those same rich brokers and developers were tearing down rental housing and replacing them with "luxury" condos and "affordable homes from the mid $900,000's"): own rather than rent--better tax relief and an equity loan to live off or purchase transportation with (because your paltry income won't cover the basics of life). Then a large chunk of lower income folk were crammed into subprimes when they qualified for standard mortgages... predatory lending. Common to both realities is the rich person preying on the less powerful and the vulnerable.
Fuzzy math and imaginary reality do not solutions make.
Bramscher has it wired right.
And for those who actually believe the bullshit PR campaigns by Countrywide and B of A and the BushCo's latest "solution", a quote from B of A, "We're not obligated to help you save your home. We own your home and we're taking it back no matter what." To quote a recent Countrywide employee in the foreclosure dept, "I can kick 1000 people a day out of their houses. I plan to set records this month." When asked why he said this with relish, he said, "It's about spreading the pain around. In six months B of A will own this place and most of us won't have a job. I plan to keep mine so I plan to set records in foreclosures per day to ensure that happens. It's just business, us against them."
The banks are brutal savages. They care nothing but to line their pockets. That people are suffering at the schemes of the rich means nothing to them. Congress and the Chimperor are no different, they are the aristocracy afterall.
One of these days the homeless will fight back. Rich people better hire Blackwater like Countrywide's CEO has. They're gonna need firepower to save their rich white asses. Civil war is coming and it won't be north vs. south, it'll be the poor against the rich.
And let the credit card companies and bond insurers be attached at the ankle as they go down....even Paulson is against a bailout!
http://bigbigbet.blogspot.com/
"The new way the politicians plan to help moderate-income families is to have them pay a special 18 percent income tax to live in a home in which they have no equity."
If it were me, I would walk away and go rent a condo or an appartment!
Both Republicans and Democrats are accepting large political contributions from Finance/Insurance/Real Estate industries. Do you think they're going to save your ass?
http://www.opensecrets.org/industries/indus.asp?ind=F&cycle=2008
"The creatures outside looked from pig to man, and from man to pig, and from pig to man again; but already it was impossible to say which was which." -- George Orwell
The ownership society is the top 1-5% who control the government/military/banks and will throw your ass out on the streets if you don't pay the 30-year tribute known as the mortgage.
Let's be honest with our analysis here. This was another gamed event, in the great tradition of the S&L's, and the Dems will bail out the banks to ensure that prices remain high, not subject to supply/demand constraints, to ensure that people will always need to borrow at their upper-limit, never accumulate much in equity, and they'll continue to shaft us as usual with usury hidden in amortization tables.
This analysis is all wrong. Here's the better analysis:
1. Why do so few have title to so much land?
2. Why aren't home prices, real estate in general, allowed to be subject to supply/demand market dynamics?
3. Why do we have such rampant usury? e.g. a 200K loan @ 6.5%, 30-year fixed is over 100% interest in relation to the principal.
4. Why should we be bailing out banks?
If you want to critique the "ownership society", Mr. Baker, start out with the top 5% who probably control 75% of this planet's real estate. There's your ownership society. The remainder is the subjugated society.
Baker seems to be asking for too little here. I'm asking why so few control title to so much real estate.
And why prices aren't reasonable in relation to median incomes in neighborhoods all over this country.
Answer: we're descending back to the serfdom we never really left.
MrBramscher: You have to charge 6.5 % due to inflation. If you don't you might as well buy something like gold instead of lending out if you want your money to still buy , at least what it buys now, thirty years later.
NRA
The problem is not that the "morons" bought the houses, its that the banks gambled on the rising house market and lost. These losses threaten the economy. The bailout is for the banks, not the homeowners.
Exactly right lizard.
lizard: What causes inflation? Might it have something to do with the fact that ordinary people have a finite income/borrowing limit, whereas government+banks can basically borrow into the red, and print up more money when they need it (thus diluting the buying power, causing inflation)? Or perhaps that big investors sense they are losing money in the real estate market and shift their rapine tactics to other sectors (like food)?
My point is that lending is the crux of this mess. In ordinary market supply/demand commodity dynamics, the prices of things adjust based on a more sensible set of variables.
Except for the wealthy who are not penalized with a mortgage, real estate market prices adjust based not solely on supply/demand, but simply on the size of the monthly mortgage bill. So huge amounts of chicanery (50-year mortgage, sub-prime, ARM, etc.) can disguise the actual price, causing speculation, grossly inflated prices, etc.
The parasitic usury industries are all about exploiting both sides of the wealth divide. They reward the wealthy with dividends and interest earned on savings, they penalize the poor with interest paid on mortgages.
So if you see the charging of interest as a necessary byproduct of inflation, I would ask about the other side of the coin: the interest earned on investments, etc. by the wealthy. Also a necessary byproduct of inflation? Or perhaps I'm right after all -- the whole thing is a modern-day version of serfdom, an economic siphon or pump, a modern system of forced tribute.
It's about income inequality. People with upper middle class incomes had money to speculate and were offered incredible leverage vehicles by the banks and tax breaks by the feds. Essentially, they could hide large chunks of money by purchasing houses with interest-only loans, rent them for two years, and then sell them at huge profits.
As first time home buyers were drawn into this market the only way to play was to falsify income papers. Since the banks were selling the loans at a profit anyway they didn't concern themselves with the fraud.
This whole ponzi scheme went around in circles several times from the mid-90's to early 2006 when the last suckers bought in. Meanwhile the banks had sold ungodly numbers of equity loans that fueled SUV sales and travel booms.
Now the whole world is realizing the US has been printing paper at the same rate Zimbabwe has and calling them assets. If we had just inflated our money at 20% yearly we would have crashed in 2003. The truth is that we don't do real work anymore most of us. The majority of americans sell crap to each other, provide worthless services or actually make money hindering the proper functioning of the economy. Hell, we keep 1% of our population in jails and it takes at least one civil servant to keep 10 guys in jail. Mostly on drug possession charges.
Hell, we have 5? no maybe 6 separate health insurance industries. Start with the Medicare system for the elderly, the Veterans Administration for former military, the private health insurance industry, the private dental insurance industry (your mouth isn't part of the body), the workman's compensation insurance industry (which is at least half about denying health care to injured workers), the auto insurance industry (denies health care to accident victims), and the various state provided health care systems. If we had ONE single-payer health program we could save maybe 5 percent of our GDP to put up solar panels or something.
Anyways, you get the point. If you were invested in the US you're a sucker. We have your money and we spent it on SUV's and steakhouse dinners and we're defaulting on all loans. If you're taking US dollars for you're exports you're an idiot. We don't make jack here but SUV's, weapons and um, subsidized corn ethanol.
How stupid are we? There are people in the US who would still vote for a republican after the last 8 years. The guy who killed GM's electric car program has a salary in the millions of dollars a year range. Adults in the US are dumb enough to sign on to the bailout program listed above.
Would you lend money to people like that?