Business

Toward An Erdmann Synthesis

Amongst America’s many crises, housing is at the top of the issues the country faces.

This article was written by Salim Furth and originally published by Market Urbanism.

Kevin Erdmann has a good op-ed in the Washington Post today, arguing one of the two core points that have defined his work for the past several years: Fannie and Freddie have set credit standards too high since 2007. (His other core point, that “closed access” superstar cities have made it too hard to build, is clearly correct).

Although I’ve been Erdmann’s colleague for most of this time, I’ve maintained wide priors on the question of credit standards. Many other scholars, left and right, are skeptical of the broad, century-long trend of encouraging (and subsidizing) homeownership. Whether or not Fannie & Freddie’s mortgage securitization constitutes a subsidy, it’s hard to argue that it doesn’t influence who can buy a home.

c. 1940s postcard (Kalamazoo Public Library)

Too cheap to build

The excellent Kalamazoo Debate helped clarify things, probably because it isolates the credit issue from the supply issue.

  • Rent in Kalamazoo has become surprisingly high
  • But it’s not because of zoning-induced supply constraints
  • Houses are still cheap relative to incomes

With these facts, Kevin’s story sounds very plausible:

  • Regulators in 2007 shut off credit to marginal potential homebuyers
  • Builders could no longer find buyers for entry-level houses, so they stopped building as many
  • Rents have not been high enough to justify large-scale apartment construction
  • Marginal potential homebuyers were left competing for the fixed stock of rental housing

There are some holes in this argument. Homeownership in Kalamazoo hasn’t changed much over time. Would a temporary 2% drop really shut off the supply of new housing? But if we leave Kalamazoo aside, the national decrease was much larger and the rebound incomplete, so maybe Kevin’s right nationally, at least for post-2000 analysis.

The U.S. homeownership rate is low relative to the 2000s, but high relative to the 1970s-1990s

Filter-down economics

Can Kevin and the skeptics both be right? There’s no technical contradiction between these two points, they just have opposite vibes:

  • The federal government and GSEs have subsidized homeownership through a variety of means and the US has more homeowners than it would have if the feds were neutral.
  • Homeownership subsidies raise the price/rent ratio, keep construction brisk, and put downward pressure on rent.

(We can add: rental subsidies don’t boost construction much because they’re targeted to people who aren’t close to being able to afford new construction and/or because zoning limits the land available for multifamily construction.)

This doesn’t tell us whether subsidies are good or not. It wouldn’t exactly be a surprise if a milk subsidy made milk cheaper, right? Housing markets are weirder than milk markets, but it’s still not that weird to think that housing subsidies make housing cheaper.

Is this expensive new home subsidized? (Salim Furth)

MOAR MATH!

Just because the subsidy / filter synthesis is possible doesn’t mean it’s true. The pre-2000 homeownership rate was stable and lower than today’s. Was that just demographics? Is Kevin’s story correct for a working-class slice of the population but less central to the major trends than he believes?

It’s in big, general-equilibrium questions like this that we really need rigorous economic modeling. The facts are available. Can a model match these moments?

Share
U Cast Studios

Recent Posts

  • Business

These Are The States Driving America’s Economic Growth

The U.S. economy grew 2.1% in real terms in 2025, but that national figure tells… Read More

15 hours ago
  • Business

Why Data Center Growth Forecasts Are Essential To Mitigating Their Impact On The Grid

Much of the concern surrounding artificial intelligence is about power: the technology’s economic power to… Read More

5 days ago
  • News

Cuba Reconnects To Power Grid After Latest Island Blackout

Cuba fully restored its energy grid early Wednesday after the third nationwide blackout this year, but… Read More

5 days ago
  • Business

Beijing Weighs Restricting Foreign Access To China’s Top AI Models

Up until now, the politicization of AI models generally ran in one direction with US… Read More

6 days ago
  • Lifestyle

Women Over 40 Are Now Having More Babies Than U.S. Teenagers

Americans are increasingly reaching major life milestones later than previous generations, and parenthood is no… Read More

1 week ago
  • Business

Bill To Prohibit Sex Offenders And Human Traffickers From Elected Office Amended To Exempt Pedophiles

Sen. Scott Wiener requested the exemptions, and they exactly match his SB 145 legislation. Editors… Read More

2 weeks ago

This website uses cookies.