Published: 5 Jan 11 11:18 CET | Print version
Online: http://www.thelocal.se/31264/20110105/
Reducing Sweden's mortgage interest tax break would help protect against unwanted bubbles in the housing market, a prominent Liberal Party (Folkpartiet) politician has argued.
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Another thing, is that houses bought with loan money are pumping the bubble. To some degree, if people would have to buy their apartments with their own money (to a substantial degree), the demand would drop and drop in demand would mean that the construction companies would have to lower their profit margins (which universally, around the world, are the biggest part of the price, if the is an estate bubble), due to the effects of elasticity. Of course, there will be a countering effect of price elasticity of demand, but I guess that steady state prices per m^2 would be lower.
If we are giving loans to anyone, we who does not have his/hers own saving, we are going to pump an estate bubble, because the effects of loans are included into the income elasticity of demand, even though a loan is not really an income - in fact it can in log term constitute a loss, and it will constitute a loss if the prices of houses will not increase faster than inflation.
That situation is NOT sustainable, because of positive feedback - higher prices will push higher demand for loans/mortgages, banks will happily increase the supply, that in turn will mean that the income elasticity of demand will cause the demand to raise, that will cause the prices to increase again, that again will increase the demand for mortgages, banks will again happily give out more mortgages, and due to this positive feedback the machine will rev faster and faster until it explodes into millions of glittery pieces, just like it did in the US.
That situation can be avoided by requiring people to cover at least 25% of the price of their new home with their own money. That should stop the vicious cycle.
By reducing the tax break, this is effecitvely a tax increase, which is the last thing Sweden needs, and would screw existing homeowners because their resale value would be hurt. Likewise a suddenly imposed minimum of 25% would also be very hurtfull to resale values. The minimum % ownership would have to be increased slowly to avoid an overnight plunge in re-sale values.
Downtown Stockholm, just like downton London or NYC is prime real estate, so first time homeowners should not automatically assume that they are entitled to own a medium or large apartment there, particularly in Sweden, where good commuter infrastructure exists so that they can still commute to work. The real question of whether or not there is a bubble should therefore be directed to affordability of the network of suburbs that are within commuter reach.
Having just come from California (where I still own property) what I hear from people around me is very reminiscent of the housing bubble there. People in a frenzy to buy anything, no money down, interest only payments...I thought it impossible that any country on earth had not learned the lesson of the poor banking policies in the US. The main thing is to have people vested in the property, otherwise there comes a time when there's a perverse incentive to walk away because you're not losing any money (but you are losing by continuing to throw money in an underwater property). Hope they figure something elegant out and not ham-fisted.