Study Predicts Millions of Unsellable Homes Could Upend Market
By Kyle Mittan
University of Arizona – August 11, 2020
-- The prediction by professor Arthur C. Nelson undermines the classic
"big promise" in homeownership: that a home, after it's paid off, can
be sold for a retirement nest egg.
Millions of American homes could become
unsellable – or could be sold at significant losses to their senior-citizen
owners – between now and 2040, according to new research from the University of
Arizona.
The study predicts that many baby
boomers and members of Generation X will struggle to sell their homes as they
become empty nesters and singles. The problem is that millions of millennials
and members of Generation Z may not be able to afford those homes, or they may
not want them, opting for smaller homes in walkable communities instead of
distant suburbs, .
Baby boomers are people born between
1946 and 1964, while Gen Xers were born between 1965 and 1980. Millennials were
born between 1981 and 1997 and Gen Zers between 1998 and 2015.
The study predicts that the change in
home-buying behaviors by younger generations may result in a glut of homes that
could grow as high as 15 million by 2040, with homeowners selling for far below
what they paid – if they can sell them at all. Most seniors will be able to
sell their homes, the study says, but it may become especially difficult in
smaller, distant and slow- or non-growing markets.
Arthur C. Nelson, a professor of urban planning
and real estate development at the UArizona College of
Architecture, Planning and Landscape Architecture, calls his
prediction "The Great Senior Short Sale" in a paper published this
week in the Journal of Comparative Urban Land and
Policy.
An expert in urban studies, public
policy and land development, Nelson has spent a large part of his career
studying the changing demand for suburban homes, since long before the housing
market crash of the Great Recession.
His newest prediction, if it plays out,
would undermine one of the "big promises" of homeownership for
millions of seniors, Nelson said: that a home, after it's paid off, can be sold
for a retirement nest egg.
"What if you pay off your mortgage
over 30 years," he added, "and nobody buys the home?"
The Mismatch in the Market
Nelson's prediction comes from
synthesizing data from sources such as the U.S. Census Bureau and the Harvard
Joint Center for Housing Studies. The Harvard center is a leading source of
data for those in academia, government and business to make sense of housing
issues to inform policy decisions.
Nelson, using those data, mapped how the
ages of homeowners would change between 2018 and 2038. Looking at three age
groups – over 65, 35-64 and under 35 – he came to the projection at the center
of the study: that there may be fewer homeowners under 65 in 2038 than there
were in 2018, even though the vast majority of people over 65 in 2038 will own
their homes.
"There's the mismatch – if those
over 65 unload their homes, and those under 65 aren't buying them, what happens
to those homes?" he asks.
Nelson is careful not to overstate his
findings; millions of people will buy the homes that older generations are
selling, he said.
"But the vast supply is so large
and the demand for them is going to be so small, in comparison, that there's
going to be a real problem starting later this decade," he said.
Nelson said he expects the phenomenon to
reveal itself not all at once, but gradually over the next couple decades, at
about 500,000 to 1 million homes every year. It's not likely to have much
impact in growing metropolitan areas such as Phoenix or Dallas where
"growth will solve all kinds of problems," he said, but it will
matter in thousands of suburban and rural areas – including some parts of
Arizona.
"The people who own homes now in
thousands of declining communities may simply have to walk away from them,"
he said.
Proposed Policy Solutions
Nelson's study urges action from
lawmakers, and he offers some ideas of his own.
Among those is a program in which the
federal government would buy back homes that have or may become unsellable. The
Federal Emergency Management Agency already does something similar with homes
that or have been or are likely to be damaged by natural disasters.
By bearing the cost of buying those
homes, Nelson said, the government could help seniors avoid turning to federal
social support programs after losing their homes. Those programs are costly to
taxpayers, and the cost is even greater when programs need to be administered
in rural or suburban areas – where homes are predicted not to sell, Nelson
said.
"If you have millions of seniors
spread all across the landscape costing a fortune to serve, we might be better
off finding ways to induce many to sell their homes," he said. "And
we could actually then save potentially billions in public money that would
otherwise be used to serve people in very distant and remote locations."
Nelson also proposes programs at the
state level that would allow younger people to live with older empty nesters,
single people and others who live in homes larger than they may need, but who
do not want to move.
By sharing homes, Nelson said, older
people would not have to sell them, and younger housemates could act as
caregivers and property managers.
The idea is already being tested in
cities such as Minneapolis and Seattle and across the state of Oregon, Nelson
said. There, laws were passed last year that allowed owners of single-family
homes to divide them into multiple units.
Nelson completed his study just before
the coronavirus outbreak became widespread. But the pandemic, he said, doesn't
make the housing issue any less urgent.
"We're going to wake up in 2025 –
give or take a few years – to realize that millions of seniors can't get out of
their homes and that it’s going to get worse in to the 2030s," he said.
"We must start doing things now to reduce the coming shock of too many
seniors trying to sell their homes to too few younger buyers."
https://news.arizona.edu/story/study-predicts-millions-unsellable-homes-could-upend-market
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