Has the Effect of Foreclosures on Housing Prices Been Overstated?

Since the beginning of the subprime meltdown, policymakers, housing experts, and economists have been looking for data that would enable them to predict housing price declines for individual states and for the nation as a whole. To date, no academic study has offered a quantitative basis for evaluating the potential threat of declining home prices. Despite the absence of any reliable forecasts, Congress is poised to pass a housing relief package motivated in part by a desire to avoid a downward spiral in home prices that a wave of foreclosures might cause. In a new study by AEI visiting scholar Charles W. Calomiris of Columbia Business School and Stanley Longhofer and William Mills of Wichita State University, the authors use quarterly data for the past twenty years to construct a model of the economy that relates at the state level the current housing market, foreclosures, and other local economic conditions. Combining those data with state-level foreclosure forecasts, the authors find that many of the concerns about foreclosure effects on housing prices for the next two years have been overstated.

About the Author

 

Charles W.
Calomiris
  • Charles W. Calomiris, who codirected AEI's Financial Deregulation Project until 2007, is concurrently the Henry Kaufman Professor of Financial Institutions at Columbia Business School. He is also a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research, a member of the Shadow Financial Regulatory Committee and the Financial Economists Roundtable, and the coordinator of the "Bank Performance and the Economy" program at the Center for Financial Research at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. His research at AEI spans several areas, from banking and corporate finance to financial history and monetary economics. Mr. Calomiris also served on the 2000 International Financial Institution Advisory Commission. Known as the Meltzer Commission, this congressionally mandated group recommended specific reforms of the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, the regional development banks, and the World Trade Organization to the U.S. government.
  • Phone: 2128548748
    Email: ccalomiris@aei.org

 

Peter J.
Wallison
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