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American consumers react more radically to changes in their housing
wealth than to changes in the size of their bank accounts, according to
research by economists from the University of Southern California Lusk
Center for Real Estate and the University of California Los Angeles
Ziman Center for Real Estate.
With housing values continuing to slide in most metropolitan areas
across the U.S., the research suggests a 10 percent decline in housing
wealth from 2005 highs would result in a $105 billion or 1.2 percent
contraction in personal consumption expenditures.
The research suggests sizeable risks to the U.S. economy from decreased
consumer spending caused by a retrenchment in house values. The
three-year study, to be published in Regional Science and Urban
Economics early next year, closely analyzed the spending habits of
homeowners based on their property values and the value of their
investment portfolios. Using highly detailed micro data on household
consumption behavior and financial wealth, the researchers evaluated
the variability in spending compared to changes in the market value of
household assets and financial net wealth.
“Findings indicate that the ongoing and unprecedented contraction
in housing wealth—when coupled with the very sizable recent drop
in financial wealth—is likely to have significant depressive
effects on consumer spending. As consumer spending has been the
lynchpin of the U.S. economy, such declines suggest a difficult
near-term downward adjustment for both consumers and for the U.S.
economy more generally,” says Stuart Gabriel, Ph.D., director of
the UCLA Ziman Center who co-authored the paper with Gary Painter,
Ph.D. director of research at the USC Lusk Center, and Raphael Bostic,
Ph.D, associate director of the USC Lusk Center.
“Given our results, the recent housing price declines reinforce
the extensive losses in the stock market and layoffs in the financial
and automotive sectors. Taken together, they increasingly suggest that
there will be longer-term effects for the U.S. and global
economies,” Bostic says.
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