AAF's Director of Financial
Services Policy Thomas Wade has posted the most recent version of his housing chart book, providing an
up-to-date survey of mortgage rates and originations, housing permits and
starts, construction, vacancies, and prices. Now, you might say to yourself,
“Self, I have no interest in over 45 pages of charts.” But you would be wrong.
Housing lies at the center of two of the most important policy challenges at
the moment.
The first is the near-term outlook for macroeconomic growth, and the related
need for monetary easing by the Federal Reserve and fiscal stimulus by the
administration and Congress. Will economic growth continue to slow? Will the
United States fall into a recession? Or, will the growth slowdown prove
transitory and top-line growth rates again hover near 3 percent? The pace of
residential construction is central to the answer.
It used to be that fluctuations in housing markets were a big cause of business
cycles, and construction swings mirrored recessions and recoveries. In 2017,
however, housing contributed 0.16 percentage points (at an annual rate) to
quarterly growth in gross domestic product. As the economy heated up in 2018,
residential construction subtracted 0.18 percentage points, a headwind that
fell to 0.08 percentage points in the first half of 2019. If residential
construction continues to rebound and provides 0.2 or 0.3 percentage points to
growth, the outlook for 2020 will be considerably brighter. A continued housing
slump would add to the trade-related headwinds and weaken the economy further.
The other major policy issue is the future of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the
Federal Housing Administration. The Treasury and Housing and Urban
Development departments recently released their blueprints for housing finance
reform. While the timing of the process is completely opaque, the end game of
reforms confined to administrative action appears clear: Fannie and Freddie
build enough capital and a supervisory regime becomes adequately developed
to release them from conservatorship. The first steps in that process —
eliminating the 100 percent profit sweep and allowing them to retain some of
their earnings, and putting in place a prudential rule for holding capital —
will take place this year. But the remainder will evolve as fast as
policymakers have confidence in the fallout in housing markets.
See, 50 pages of charts are not only fun but also informative.
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