The Geoclassical 18-Year Housing Cycle
Paul Justus
[2007]
Given the shakeup in the sub-prime loan and financial markets in
August, many people may be raising questions regarding the general
health of the U.S. economy. Is the country going into a downturn
related to the housing cycle? If so, what are the broader implications
for the overall U.S. economy? Are there Federal Reserve or government
policies that can maintain a healthy economy?
Certainly there are indications of a slowing U.S. housing market. On
August 30, the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO)
released its Housing Price Index (HPI), (http://www.ofheo.gov/ ) which
showed that the 2nd Quarter HPI was only 0.1 percent higher in the
second quarter than in the first quarter of 2007. This was the lowest
growth rate since the fourth quarter of 1994.
The OFHEO report noted that:
- The state price declines over the past years in five states is
the largest number of price declines since 1996-1997.
- Of the 287 cities on OFHEO's list of "ranked"
Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs), 226 had positive
four-quarter appreciation and 61 had price declines.
- Eighteen of the 20 cities having the lowest four-quarter
appreciation rates were in Florida and California. Those cities
experienced price declines of between 4.2 and 8.7 percent.
The following selected data from the OFHEO Housing Price Index show
2nd Quarter, 2007, one-year, and five-year growth figures.
U.S./Region/ MSA |
National Ranking |
1-Yr. |
Qtr. |
5-Yr. |
United States |
--- |
3.19 |
0.08 |
50.76 |
East South Central |
--- |
5.93 |
1.11 |
31.21 |
Fayetteville-Springdale-Rogers,
AR-MO |
147 |
3.49 |
0.47 |
43.79 |
Fort Smith, AR-OK |
130 |
3.94 |
0.48 |
24.99 |
Little Rock-North Little
Rock-Conway, AR |
119 |
4.26 |
1.22 |
30.78 |
If the U.S. housing market is slowing, what might some of the greater
implications be to the overall U.S. economy? If one follows the
mainstream or neoclassical economic theories, one would expect that
the Federal Reserve will rise to the occasion with the monetary tools
at their disposal. These tools would include a cut in the federal
interest rate, opening the discount window to non-banks, reducing
reserve requirements to encourage the banks to lend more and lowering
margin requirements to boost stock prices.
Most market watchers expect the Federal Reserve Board to drop the
prime rate a quarter percent at their September 18 meeting. The
general belief is that with appropriate adjustments in the money
supply through changes in interest rates our national economy can
avoid the pitfalls of major downturns, recessions and depressions. If
there is an inevitable business cycle - a hotly debated and
controversial subject - then the correct interest rate adjustments can
bring our booms into a soft landing rather than a bust.
However, there are other economic schools of thought that adhere to
quite different points of view. One of these schools (called "geoclassical
Economics" by economist Fred Foldvary) is presented in the book "Boom
Bust: House Prices, Banking and the Depression of 2010 by Fred
Harrison, Director for the Land Research Trust of London.
Harrison's (and other geoclassical economists) views and arguments
can be summarized as follows:
- Historically there is an 18-year real estate cycle that we need
to understand to predict ups and downs of our economy. Real estate
prices and construction peak before the general downturn in the
economy. As the economy booms, speculators drive prices too high
for current uses. Investment consequently falls, leading to a
recession that can last between three to five years.
- The real estate cycle begins during a recession and is fueled
by a policy of low interest rates and monetary expansion. This
artificial stimulation eventually leads to inflation and is
unsustainable. As interest rates are raised, large-scale
investments that once looked profitable are not. Borrowers default
on loans creating a financial crisis, less investment, less
demand, and a major economic downturn.
- In the 18-year cycle there is a mid-cycle minor recession.
Since the last major recession was in 1990, this theory predicts a
major downturn between 2008 and 2010.
Fred Harrison points out an apparent contradiction in attempting to
maintain economic stability with interest rate adjustments:
"When the UK and the USA went into the 2001
recession, interest rates were slashed to help industry. But lower
interest rates, through the capitalization process, meant that land
prices were increased at a time when the profit margins of
entrepreneurs were being squeezed. When the economies recovered from
recession, the central bankers turned their attention to escalating
house prices. They raised interest rates, which penalized industry
which needed to borrow and invest for growth."
In his analysis, Harrison says that current economic models are
overly focused on labor and capital rather than land and property
prices, the things Harrison believes really drive economies. According
to Harrison, classical economists such as Adam Smith thought that
because the supply of land is one of the few things that is by nature,
finite, it is land that ultimately determines our economic fate.
Harrison believes that the price of land is the best leading indicator
we have for the state of our economic health.
For economists the remedy for preventing the boom-bust economic cycle
is straightforward but considered politically unfeasible. Public
revenue should not come from economic production such as income,
wages, capital investment, sales, savings, or commerce. These kind of
taxes penalize work and human effort and reward runaway speculation on
finite resources. Instead, these economists would tap the land rent of
the country for public revenue. This would halt the speculative
escalation of land prices. According to this viewpoint, land does not
get produced, and its value comes from nature and community and public
works, so tapping it for government revenue does not hurt enterprise,
unlike taxes on sales and wages.
Other benefits of shifting to land rent taxes, according to economist
Foldvary, would include the elimination of the federal budget deficit,
the financing of the baby boomer demographic transition, the provision
of affordable housing, and the reduction of the demand for excessive
monetary expansion.
Geoclassical thinkers are not optimistic that their suggested
tax-structure reforms will be enacted any time soon. However,
economist Foldvary says that at least those who understand this theory
will be warned in advance and can arrange their affairs to minimize
the losses that others will suffer.
Whether or not geoclassical economics is a better predictor of
economic phenomena remains to be seen. However, given the variety of
predictions in the marketplace of economic thought, it probably
wouldn't hurt public policy makers and investors to read and
understand books such as Fred Harrison's to add to their box of
analytic tools.
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