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Thomas Sowell
Thomas Sowell
14 Feb 2012
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Lured To Disaster

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Behind the housing boom and bust was one of those alluring but undefined phrases that are so popular in politics— "affordable housing."

It is hard for me to know specifically what politicians are talking about when they use this phrase. But then politics is about evoking emotions, not examining specifics.

In looking back over my own life, I find it hard to think of a time when I didn't live in affordable housing.

When I first left home, back in 1948, I rented a room about 4 by 8 feet, costing $5.75 a week. Since my take-home pay was $22.50, that was affordable housing. (Multiply these numbers by about ten to get the equivalent in today's prices).

After three years of living in rented rooms, I began living in Marine Corps barracks, and sometimes tents— none of which cost me anything. That was certainly affordable.

As a civilian again, in 1954 I rented my first apartment, a studio apartment— small but affordable. But a year later, I went off to college and lived in dormitories on various campuses for the next six years. None was fancy but all of them were affordable.

After completing my academic studies, I rented another studio apartment— not a big advance, but it was affordable.

In 1969, I rented my first house, which I could now afford, after several years as a faculty member at various colleges and universities. A dozen years later, I began to buy my first house.

While the specifics will differ from person to person, my general pattern was not unusual. Most people pay for what they can afford at the time.

What, then, is the "problem" that politicians claim to be solving when they talk about creating "affordable housing"?

What they are saying and doing usually boils down to trying to enable people to choose what housing they want first— and then have some law or policy where somebody else, somewhere else, somehow or other, makes that housing "affordable" for them.

If you think it through, that is a policy for disaster. We cannot all go around buying whatever we want, whether or not we have enough money to afford it, and have somebody else make up the difference.

For society as a whole, there is no somebody else.

But of course political slogans are not meant to be thought through, are they? They are often an emotional substitute for thinking at all.

Sometimes some semblance of rationality is given to the phrase "affordable housing" by comparing the cost of housing to the income of those who live in it. That was certainly what I did when I rented my first room. That's not rocket science, then or now.

The difference is that today there is some arbitrary percentage of one's income that sets the limit to what the government will consider to be affordable housing. It used to be 25 percent but it might be 30 percent or some other proportion.

But, whatever the percentage, it is no longer the individual's responsibility to choose housing that fits within that limit. It is somehow the taxpayers' job to make up the difference, when someone chooses housing whose cost exceeds that magic number.

It is certainly no longer considered to be the individual's own responsibility to acquire the work skills and experience to be able to earn enough to afford better housing as the years passed. Why do that, when the government can simply "spread the wealth around," to use another political phrase?

The ultimate irony is that increasing government intervention in the housing market over the years has generally made housing less affordable than before, by any standard.

A hundred years ago, Americans spent a smaller percentage of their incomes on housing than they do today. In 1901, housing costs took 23 percent of the average American's income. By 2003, it took 33 percent of a far larger income.

In particular places where government regulations and restrictions have been especially severe, such as coastal California, rents or monthly mortgage payments have averaged as high as 50 percent of the average person's income.

Most of our problems are not nearly as severe as political "solutions." In housing, government policies have lured people into situations that were untenable to them and to the country.

To find out more about Thomas Sowell and read features by other Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com. Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305. His Web site is www.tsowell.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.


Comments

4 Comments | Post Comment
Mr. Sowell-thank you so much for speaking and writing truth. You and a handfull of others are courageous enough to speak out in an atmosphere of increasing darkness, in the US and rest of the world.
Years ago, while still working in Fla. at a Scripps Howard newspaper, I got up at my usual early am, and the Lord spoke to me in my mind-"woe unto them to that call evil good and good evil, that put darkness for light, and light for darness, tht put bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter! Woe unto them that are wise in their own eyes, and prudent (clever) in their own sight! .Isa. 5:20-23. Vs 23; Which justify the wicked for reward, and take away the righteousness of the righteous from him!.
Many say this does't apply to the US, but the US was sovereignly established by God, and the framers of our constitution used the 10 Commandments as it's guideline. As a result, God has blessed this nation beyond any other in the world. So-to whom much is given, much is required. Luke 12:48b.
When I questioned the Lord about Isa. 5, He said to me" the US is now entering into this time, when evil will be considered good, good evil, and all the rest of that verse will happen. Seek me increasingly and I will show you how to rightly divide truth from lies, and will keep you from harm."
I am seeing these things happen, and scales are on people's eyes.
The only real solution is for there to be a geniune outpouring of the Holy Spirit, with people truly repenting of their sins and turning to Christ. And judgment first begins at the house of God-which is now happening. And for just men to speak truth. Please keep doing so.

God bless you, and my prayers are with you.

Diana Wade
Comment: #1
Posted by: Diana
Tue Jan 20, 2009 7:25 AM
In a tit-for-tat society, where justice is meted out in proportion to the evil one has committed, barneyfrank would be eviscerated and hung in effigy for a week at a time, equally divided between Freddie Mac and Beewhat Mae.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Juanito Verde
Tue Jan 20, 2009 9:20 AM
Upon reading your column I'm forced to wonder, with whom do you really have your beef? The people who bought homes they couldn't afford? The government who responded to home buyers and lending institutions by relaxing borrowing qualifications? The housing industry who collaborated with the cultural mandate of "bigger is better"? Who?

I agree with you that housing has become more expensive relative to income. My father bought his first and last home in 1948 for $8400, about 2.5 times his annual income. Now the ratio is closer to 7-10. However, simply citing California taxes and regulations alongside high real estate appreciation is an observation, not an argument for cause and affect. I don't mind polemics and strong opinions, but I believe you can do better than this sort of simple rant, and something better is certainly required if it's going to be useful now and in the hard times coming
Comment: #3
Posted by:
Fri Jan 23, 2009 3:27 PM
I enjoy reading your column every week, & was delighted to find this web-site, to read more of your articles. It is so encouraging to read your articles because they make sense out of what is going on in our society. Thank-you. Marcia
Comment: #4
Posted by: Marcia
Sun Jan 25, 2009 4:24 PM
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