Eakinomics: Shelter
Inflation – Is the End in Sight?
This headline
was sure to grab attention: “Rental Market Tracker: U.S. Rents Post First
Annual Decline in Three Years.” The news release was from Redfin, the real
estate brokerage firm. The table from the release is reproduced at the
bottom; it indicates that year-over-year changes in rent were negative in 13
of the 50 most populous metropolitan areas in the United States.
In contrast, four measures of shelter inflation from the official Consumer
Price Index (CPI) produced by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) are shown
below. Although it is probably a violation of the norms of civilized graphing
to put four lines in one presentation, the most important fact jumps right
out: There are no negative entries. Regardless of whether one looks at rents
(blue and gray) or owner-equivalent rent (OER, the hypothetical rent a
homeowner would charge herself monthly; orange and yellow), inflation is
positive. If one looks at monthly inflation (at an annualized rate; blue and
orange) or year-over-year inflation (gray and yellow), inflation is positive.
Indeed, as has been frequently noted, year-over-year shelter inflation has
yet to peak and begin descending.

The obvious question is: What is going on here? The most obvious difference
is that the Redfin report focuses on rental housing, while the official
shelter data has both rental and homeowners. But, as the graph indicates,
these tend to track closely, so that can’t be a big deal.
The second difference is that Redfin focused on the 50 most populous areas,
while BLS constructs the CPI to be representative of all urban consumers.
But the most important difference is that Redfin displays the asking rent for
a unit, while BLS measures the rent someone is actually paying. Some people
may be paying the last month of a lease signed a year ago, but if the Redfin
data are right, they will have the opportunity to sign a new lease for less
in the month to come. That means that softness in the rental market
translates into lower actual shelter inflation slowly over time. The CPI is
correctly measuring what people actually pay for shelter, but one has to
focus on new leases to get a feel for the future of shelter costs.
The other key feature of both the rental and owner-occupied markets is that
supplies remain tight. That suggests the easing of price pressures comes from
success in slowing the growth of demand – precisely the intent of Federal
Reserve tightening.
The Redfin data are one more piece of evidence that the Fed is making
progress, albeit slow and limited progress, in reducing inflation to its
2-percent target.
Median Asking Rents: March 2023

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