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Study: Housing Collapse Steeper Than
During Great Depression
By Judson Berger
Published June 15, 2011
The
author of a study claiming the
U.S. housing collapse is now worse than during the Great Depression
warned
Wednesday that the market likely will continue to fall for the rest of
the year
before going stagnant.
Paul
Dales, senior U.S. economist for
Capital Economics, predicted home prices would fall another 3 percent
over the
rest of 2011 before potentially hitting bottom.
“Even
when that happens, I don’t think
we’re going to see any significant or sustained rises,” he told
FoxNews.com
Wednesday, predicting “a couple years of pretty much no recovery
whatsoever.”
The
bleak prediction comes after he
released a report estimating that since the collapse began from the
pricing
peak of 2006, prices have fallen 33 percent -- more than the 31 percent
dive recorded
between the 1920s and 1930s.
The
data underscores the trouble the
U.S. economy is having emerging from what is described as the worst
recession
since the Great Depression. “The sharp fall in house prices in the
first
quarter provided further confirmation that this housing crash has been
larger
and faster than the one during the Great Depression,” the analysis said.
Dales
said the collapse has eclipsed
that of the Great Depression because the boom that preceded it was much
bigger.
Unlike during the 1920s, access to the housing market was far more open
leading
up to 2006.
“This
boom was characterized by
homeownership becoming the norm for pretty much anyone,” Dales said,
noting
that the boom has effectively been thrown in reverse.
While
the financial markets have
partially bounced back since the 2008 Wall Street collapse and the
economy as a
whole has been growing, the employment picture is bleak and housing
continues
to suffer.
The
national jobless rate ticked up to
9.1 percent in May -- that was after the Standard &
Poor’s/Case-Shiller
index issued a report showing home prices in a dozen metropolitan
regions hit
their lowest level in March since the collapse began. Nationally,
prices hit a
new post-collapse low in the first quarter, and have returned to
roughly 2002
levels.
David
Blitzer, chairman of the Index
Committee, declared the numbers confirmed a “double-dip in home
prices.” He and
other analysts suggested the U.S. housing market has not yet hit bottom.
The
dismal housing market news was
compounded Wednesday by the National Association of Home Builders’
release of
its monthly Housing Market Index. The index, which measures builder
sentiment
on the market, fell to a level of 13 on its 100-point scale. That’s
three
points below the previous month and the lowest level since September
2010. Any
reading below 50 indicates negative sentiment about the market.
With
fewer homes being built, fewer
jobs are available and less revenue is generated for local, state and
federal
governments. Each new home built creates an average of three jobs for a
year
and generates about $90,000 in taxes, according to the group.
On
the bright side, the NAHB noted
that a poll it took of 2,000 2012 voters found that housing is still
considered
by the largest plurality of homeowners as their biggest investment.
Amid
the troubling developments in
housing, labor and elsewhere, the Obama administration has tried to
push
several new economic proposals, ranging from new training programs to
tax
relief.
President
Obama is pleading for
patience on the economy while at the same time urging the public to
stay
positive.
“The
sky is not falling,” the
president said during a stop in North Carolina two days ago.
Read
it with links at Foxnews
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