Re: the myth of the paid-for house
As suggested earlier, we need to beware of making broad generalizations in real estate markets. Undoubtedly there are some areas where, perhaps due to rent controls, extremely high ownership prices, or other market inefficiencies, where renting would make sense purely from an economic perspective, particularly where the resident doesn't have a choice of owning outright, but must choose between renting the property or the money to buy it.
As for the over-sized home argument, if we are comparing owning versus renting, we have to control for size. Comparing the cost of owning a huge McMansion with the cost of renting an efficiency apartment is not an apples-to-apples proposition. One often has the choice of owning a small home versus renting a small home, or owning a large home versus renting a large home; and that is what needs to be compared if the question at bar is owning versus renting.
And as alluded to with the inflation point, outright nominal house price declines can be expected to be reversed if sufficient inflation takes place. Naturally, you don't expect this if you expect a long-term, Japanese-style deflationary scenario, but I am more concerned about rampant inflation as the Fed tries to paper over the catastrophe engendered by its previous policy mistakes.
And don't forget, we have that deflation fighting ace in the pilot's seat of yonder helicopter ...
As suggested earlier, we need to beware of making broad generalizations in real estate markets. Undoubtedly there are some areas where, perhaps due to rent controls, extremely high ownership prices, or other market inefficiencies, where renting would make sense purely from an economic perspective, particularly where the resident doesn't have a choice of owning outright, but must choose between renting the property or the money to buy it.
As for the over-sized home argument, if we are comparing owning versus renting, we have to control for size. Comparing the cost of owning a huge McMansion with the cost of renting an efficiency apartment is not an apples-to-apples proposition. One often has the choice of owning a small home versus renting a small home, or owning a large home versus renting a large home; and that is what needs to be compared if the question at bar is owning versus renting.
And as alluded to with the inflation point, outright nominal house price declines can be expected to be reversed if sufficient inflation takes place. Naturally, you don't expect this if you expect a long-term, Japanese-style deflationary scenario, but I am more concerned about rampant inflation as the Fed tries to paper over the catastrophe engendered by its previous policy mistakes.
And don't forget, we have that deflation fighting ace in the pilot's seat of yonder helicopter ...
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