Here are some housing articles that caught my eye:
1. A recent paper by Sven Damen, Matthijs Korevaar & Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh has the following abstract:
Residential properties with the lowest rent levels provide the highest investment returns to their owners. Using detailed rent, cost, and price data from the United States, Belgium, and The Netherlands, we show that this phenomenon holds across housing markets and time. If anything, low-rent units hedge business cycle risk. We also find no evidence for differential regulatory risk exposure. We document segmentation of investors, with large corporate landlords shying away from the low-tier segment possibly for reputational reasons. Financial constraints prevent renters from purchasing their property and medium-sized landlords from scaling up, sustaining excess risk-adjusted returns. Low-income tenants ultimately pay the price for this segmentation in the form of a high rent burden.
I have not read the paper, so I have no evidence against any of the claims made in the abstract. Nonetheless, it’s worth noting that this is exactly the result I would have expected based on my experience being a landlord back in Boston. I think of that experience as being one of the two biggest mistakes in my life (along with writing a textbook.) I found that the return from being a landlord is not worth the aggravation, at least for me. I would expect potential landlords to insist on a higher rate of return—a “compensating differential”—before being willing to invest in property in a low-income area where the problem tenants are especially common.
2. In a recent post, I argued that the so-called “housing bubble” was a myth, it never happened. I cited the fact that real housing prices had fully recovered to 2005-06 levels, and thus if prices were obviously too high back at that time, then they must also be too high today. Some commenters argued that real housing prices are not the correct metric, and that housing really was overvalued in 2005-06. But Kevin Erdmann has a post that suggests other measures of housing affordability are also back at 2005-06 levels:
If this ratio is again much too high, are we about to have another 2008-style crash?
3. There’s an ongoing debate about the cause of the recent migration from blue states to red states. Matt Yglesias has a tweet that suggests the problem is housing prices:
To avoid reasoning from a price change, it’s best to look at the relationship between prices and quantities. Yglesias implicitly does this and correctly claims that the migration to red states is primarily caused by building restrictions in blue states that raise housing prices and push people to places where housing is cheaper. The high housing prices in blue states suggest that these are very desirable places to live, at the margin. Here’s Bloomberg:
A 1,100-square-foot (102-square-meter) house on a cul-de-sac in the city of Santa Clara recently sold for $2.2 million, drawing 11 offers, said Vinicius Brasil, an agent with Keller Williams. It was an average home in a spot that’s not necessarily the most prestigious, but conveniently close to companies like Apple and Nvidia, he said.
But the story is a bit more complicated than the generalization that people are moving from expensive blue states to cheap red states. Illinois is an inexpensive blue state than continues to lose population, even relative to purple states like Wisconsin and red states like Indiana. Colorado and Washington are expensive blue states that are gaining population. This suggests that housing costs are not the only factor driving interstate migration.
The “revealed preference” that can be inferred from price and migration data strongly suggests that the public regards Colorado and Washington as better than average blue states, while Illinois is regarded as a worse than average blue state. Some of that may reflect things like weather, but not all. South Dakota has a growing population despite worse weather than Illinois and more expensive housing. One thing South Dakota does not have is a state income tax, which is also true of fast-growing Texas, Florida, Nevada, Tennessee and Washington. (That’s not to deny that weather is a big factor in Florida’s rapid growth.)
4. In the past, I pointed to Austin as an example of how housing construction could reduce rents. New data suggests the gains were even larger than I had imagined, far larger:
Nowhere in the country have rents declined as much as they have in Austin — now 22% off the peak reached in August 2023, according to Redfin. The median asking rent is $1,399 per month, down $400 in less than three years. . . .
In 2021 — which Reed calls “the year of extreme” — developers poured into Austin as pandemic-era corporate relocations surged and remote workers flocked to the city seeking lower taxes, sunny weather, a plethora of tech startups and a robust social scene. Builders typically take two years to go from buying land to welcoming tenants, and as their cranes climbed into the sky, the new arrivals crammed in to the existing apartment stock. . . .
Then came the flood of new apartments. Developers dumped almost 50,000 rental units on the city in 2023 and 2024, according to Fannie Mae data. That represented a 14% increase in the supply, the biggest on a percentage basis for any major US metro area.
READER COMMENTS
John Hall
Mar 3 2025 at 11:42am
“The “revealed preference” that can be inferred from price and migration data strongly suggests that the public regards Colorado and Washington as better than average blue states, while Illinois is regarded as a worse than average blue state. Some of that may reflect things like weather, but not all. South Dakota has a growing population despite worse weather than Illinois and more expensive housing. One thing South Dakota does not have is a state income tax, which is also true of fast-growing Texas, Florida, Nevada, Tennessee and Washington. (That’s not to deny that weather is a big factor in Florida’s rapid growth.)”
Illinois has a much higher tax and regulatory burden than its neighbors.
steve
Mar 3 2025 at 12:01pm
2. I think not though with the coming tariffs lumber prices likely rise, hence housing gets more costly. So we may have a crash in the number of houses being built for a while. That said, I think a large part of the problem with the 2000s crash was the mortgages and not the housing per se. A large percentage were liar’s loans, large ARMs and greater than 100% mortgages. Any kind of downturn in the economy and a huge percentage of those were bound to fail. I dont think we have those kinds of issues with present mortgages.
Steve
Scott Sumner
Mar 3 2025 at 11:58pm
Yes, but subprime is not what caused the banking crisis and the recession.
Craig
Mar 3 2025 at 12:25pm
“Illinois is an inexpensive blue state than continues to lose population, even relative to purple states like Wisconsin and red states like Indiana.”
IL is large of course, you can go to southern portions of IL and its relatively rural. The stats in the chart suggest that TN is more expensive than IL and maybe in the aggregate it is, but people move from Chicago to TN because its WAY cheaper, generally for them. TN gets a fair amount of ex-IL and ex-OH and major part of reason is TN cost of living and housing is very, very attractive.
Scott Sumner
Mar 3 2025 at 11:57pm
People are also leaving non-Chicago parts of Illinois.
Kevin Erdmann
Mar 3 2025 at 4:08pm
Thanks for posting that first paper. What great work! It’s about time that this realization started to seep into the academy!
Scott Sumner
Mar 3 2025 at 11:56pm
I should thank you for all the great work you’ve done on this subject.
bill
Mar 3 2025 at 6:24pm
Around 1982 or 1983, about 78,000 apartments were built in Dallas in a 12 month span. That was on a base of less than 300,000 units. Still hard to comprehend, but it was part of the S&L debacle. I can’t recall how much rents fell.
David S
Mar 3 2025 at 8:59pm
A deep irony to the housing shortage in New England–particularly in eastern Massachusetts—is that older cities like Fitchburg, Brockton, Worcester, Lawrence, and Gardner tend to have land use regulations that strangle redevelopment. The dead hand of single family zoning persists in places where it doesn’t make sense, except that incumbent homeowners would fight to the death to preserve because they understand the price impacts of scarcity.
Scott Sumner
Mar 3 2025 at 11:55pm
And yet Cambridge is embracing Yimbyism.
David S
Mar 4 2025 at 4:30am
Yes! In all the gloom and doom these days that was an impressive achievement. The unfortunate aspect of the new regulation–if it holds through the next election cycle–is that as-of-right density increases from 4 stories to 6 stories require an affordable housing component. Now that I think of it, that was a necessary bone to throw to ultra-progressives in order to get their support for the ordinance.
robc
Mar 4 2025 at 8:27am
The statewide averages are very misleading. In 2021, I moved from Charleston Co, SC to Larimer Co, CO and got a larger house for less money. But this chart shows CO as enormously more expensive than SC.
The data isnt wrong, its just not fine grained enough to be useful. The mountain towns in CO pull the median up, the mountain towns in SC push it down.
David Henderson
Mar 4 2025 at 12:48pm
I would love to learn more about your experience as a landlord. Your bottom line affirms my decision not to be a landlord when I had an extra $100K that I could have put down as a down payment. When I looked at the landlord/tenant laws in California and talked to friends about their experiences, I decided against.
Still, you’re a great story teller and I would love to learn more.
Scott Sumner
Mar 4 2025 at 1:38pm
It’s not so much that I had a horrible experience, rather that even a somewhat frustrating experience is far worse than simply buying stocks. For a different personality type it’s presumably worth it, or else they wouldn’t do it.
I heard worse stories from other landlords
David Henderson
Mar 4 2025 at 2:43pm
Thanks.
Kurt Schuler
Mar 6 2025 at 8:53pm
Scott, as one who has read your books other than your textbook and profited from them, what was it about the textbook that was a mistake? Was it too much time for too little reward, intellectual or financial? (Jim Gwartney said in an interview I did with him that the first edition of his textbook took him three times as long to write as he planned, from which he developed a rule for his subsequent writing to make his best estimate of the time involved and multiply by three. Experience usually bore out the rule.)