Op-Ed: Bursting the bubble will hurt everyone

Economist Arthur Grimes' recent proposal to crash Auckland house prices by 40 percent raised a few eyebrows as well as drawing a swift rejection by the Prime Minister, writes IGPS research fellow Toby Moore.

Op-Ed: Bursting the bubble will hurt everyone

Economist Arthur Grimes' recent proposal to crash Auckland house prices by 40 percent raised a few eyebrows as well as drawing a swift rejection by the Prime Minister, writes IGPS research fellow Toby Moore.

Toby Moore, research fellow at the Institute for Governance and Policy Studies
Toby Moore, from the Institute for Governance and Policy Studies

Economist Arthur Grimes' recent proposal to crash Auckland house prices by 40 percent raised a few eyebrows as well as drawing a swift rejection by the Prime Minister, writes Institute for Government and Policy Studies research fellow Toby Moore in a recent New Zealand Herald op-ed.

The housing situation in this country is an economic and social disaster, and it is quite natural that we cast around for suitably big solutions. However, although crashing the housing market may well address affordability, it would likely do so at the expense of our economic stability.

As provocative commentary ought to do, Dr Grimes’ comments help us all to clarify the extent of our commitment to making housing more affordable.

Taking a political position that is simultaneously in favour of more affordable housing, and also committed to maintaining the existing equity of current homeowners, is nothing short of dodging the question.

The median price/income ratio in Auckland is now pushing 10 times. Even if we are able to build new housing in line with population growth, it would take longer than a generation for income growth to bring that ratio down to the level we saw at the beginning of the 2000s, based on our long-term rate of economic growth per capita, and that is assuming that we do not bid prices up any further in the meantime.

As we debate potential solutions to the housing crisis, we need to be careful to be clear about the different factors that contributed to it.

As a number of commentators have argued, building more houses, and at a higher density level, is undoubtedly part of the long-term solution. Yet this should not be taken to mean that it was simply a failure to build enough houses that got us into this situation in the first place, which can be seen quite clearly through a number of measures.

House prices in Auckland have been rising well ahead of rents over recent years. This suggests that there is a significant degree of speculation at play, not simply a shortage of places to live.

When house prices are increasing at an annualised rate in excess of 25 percent, as they did in 2003 during the last house price cycle, such behaviour becomes very difficult to explain on the basis of inadequate supply.

A more convincing explanation is 'irrational exuberance' on the part of buyers, who are betting on a continued upwards trend in prices. It also becomes difficult to see how any short-term increases in housing construction could effectively counteract this degree of optimism.

Those who suggest that land-use regulations are the primary culprit of high house prices should consider the cases of Ireland and Spain prior to 2008. In these countries, residential construction did respond to increasing house prices, but the result was simply a construction boom alongside an even larger housing boom.

Furthermore, when the bubble burst these countries ended up with an oversupply of housing, and an over-correction of prices.

Skyrocketing asset prices and the liberalisation of finance

A key factor in explaining the skyrocketing of asset prices in the last few decades is the liberalisation of finance.

Low global interest rates and fewer regulations around mortgage lending have enabled housing booms of greater regularity and magnitude across various advanced capitalist economies.

In New Zealand, this increased access to large quantities of credit has intersected with our ingrained cultural obsession with real estate investment as a way to get ahead. That this is quite obviously a zero sum game has done little to dampen investor enthusiasm.

A sharp house price correction might sound appealing to prospective buyers currently locked out of the market. However, all it would do is expose the real source of risk — the unsustainable build-up of household debt, which has now reached 163 percent of household income.

Homeowners who see rapidly rising house prices tend to increase their consumption accordingly, which is known as the 'wealth effect'. The reverse is true in the context of plummeting house prices.

Dr Grimes may be correct in his view that the banks could survive a housing crash. Nonetheless, the prospect of homeowners across the country simultaneously trying to reduce their debt levels would put New Zealand at real risk of an economic downturn.

More affordable prices are scant consolation to the unemployed. There is a growing appreciation among economists of the role of household debt overhangs in explaining the continuing economic weakness of major economies in the wake of the global financial crisis.

We need to consider what happens to the balance sheet of households, not just those of the banks. The prevailing debate around increasing the supply of housing is necessary, but this is a long-term solution.

Further measures to relieve pressure on the demand side ought to be the more immediate priority, and this includes a more comprehensive capital gains tax. Complementing the Reserve Bank's existing macro-prudential restrictions with debt to income ratios would also help to slow the buildup of household debt.

Managing the slow deflation of the bubble is easier said than done. However, a market crash is not in anyone’s interests — no matter how well intentioned.

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