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Unemployment

The U.S. economy lost more than 1 million households during the recession, even as the population grew more than 3.5 million, driving down home ownership and increasing rental vacancies at a rate that hasn’t been experienced in more than a generation.

Just as economic distress reduced households, economic recovery will increase households, concludes USC professor Gary Painter in a paper sponsored by the Research Institute for Housing America, a mortgage industry-backed think-tank.

As you read through What Happens to Household Formation in a Recession?, it becomes clear that the rebound in household formation will greatly benefit the rental market, while the impact to the residential real estate market will be more muted.

Finally, it will be important to observe a turnaround in home ownership rates before the housing market is likely to stabilize. This is because increases in initial household formation will disproportionately come from renters, which may cause home ownership to fall further. In addition, former homeowners who lost their homes due to foreclosure have had their credit damaged and will likely take time to repair their scores and secure a down payment. Once both of these classes of renters make the transition to home ownership then we would expect the housing market to stabilize.

Painter provides one of the most complete analyses of available data to capture what happens to households during changes in the economy. The graphic below illustrates the dynamic of households. During periods of economic stress and increased unemployment, more people combine households and fewer people leave existing households.

household formation model.png

Declines in employment and increases in the unemployment rate during periods of recession reduce household formation rates. Specifically, a national recession suppresses the formation of new renter households, while higher unemployment rates suppress the formation of both new renter and owner households.

The remarkable thing is how much those numbers add up: in all, a net decrease of 1.2 million households during the recession, Painter estimates.

The model…using data covering 6 recessions, predicts that rental household formation likely fell by 2–4 percentage points due to the current recession and that the formation of owner households likely fell by about 1 percentage point. Confirming these predictions, data from the ACS shows that formation of native-born households in a sample of 80 of the largest metropolitan areas has fallen by about 3 percentage points overall and by nearly 4 percentage points in the largest immigrant gateway metropolitan areas. This translates into a reduction of nearly 1.2 million households nationwide during a period where the population in these metropolitans grew by 3.4 million.

These figures help to explain the significant pressure on the residential home market and on the rental market.

As the table below demonstrates, the drop in home ownership that began in 2004 was accompanied by a sharp increase in vacant homes.

homeownership trends.png

At the same time, occupancy of rental units has decreased to generational lows, leaving one to wonder, Where have all these people gone?

Last month, Pew Research Center released data showing that multi-generational households — two or more generations sharing a home — had increased to 16% of the population during the recession. In raw numbers, this means that 7 million more people were living in multi-generational households in 2008 than were in 2000.

multigen hhs.png

That creates a depression of demand. Add in the glut of inventory that was created to satisfy the temporary demand of the housing bubble, and you’ve got the kind of discontinuity that drives down prices and disrupts the orderly progression of markets.

Interestingly, Painter shows that the elimination of households was disproportionately concentrated among native-born Americans, and particularly among households that had moved in during the recession.

homeownership rates by category.png

The good news in Painter’s analysis is that the signs of a rebound in household formation are apparent in his model.

The model suggests household formation should increase by about 2 percentage points from current levels by 2012, as people find jobs and recession-induced anxieties abate. That would imply that by 2012, normal rates of household formation should reappear (roughly 1–1.5 million new households per year), but it will take even longer before the U.S. completely recovers from the deficit in household formation caused by the severe recession.

As noted above, the first market to benefit from the gain will be rentals. The residential home market should recover more slowly, Painter argues.

To the degree that the economy rebounds more strongly, the recovery will be more rapid. The mystery of increased demand isn’t unsolvable: the dynamics that drive household formation need to reassert themselves, and the core drivers are jobs and incomes.

You can find the full report available for download here.

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A steady meme over the past month has been the zero sum game that comprised the U.S. economy over the past decade. Net job creation was at zero; GDP, adjusted for inflation, grew less than 20%; and, household net worth (through November 2009) was down 4%.

The Washington Post ran a great graphic contrasting the performance of the last decade to the previous six decades. The contrast is astounding: the last 10 years were the least productive by a wide margin.

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A cursory look at the chart makes you wonder whether we hit the top for the U.S. economy and are at the beginning of a long decline, or whether we’re simply poised at a critical inflection point for change. The disconnect for me is reconciling the sense that we’ve experienced remarkable changes in tools, processes and outcomes over the past decade, but have experiences virtually no  net tangible economic benefit.

One theme is that changing nature of work in our economy. A lot has been written about how we’ve transitioned from a manufacturing to a service base. The trend has been significant over that past 40 years, with manufacturing jobs dipping to below 10% of total employment this past March.80798B12-F34B-4EAC-8EF6-4F3A4E1703E2.jpg

Economies have to make something in order for its participants to consume things. Our service economy relies on Americans having enough money to buy things — fast food, flat screen TVs, clothing, cars, homes and everything else. A lot of people spending money creates a lot of jobs for people, creating more people who can spend money.

But somewhere in our economy we have to make something. The shift away from manufacturing over the past 40 years has been partly offset by the shift towards creating information products — technology and media primarily — that are broadly consumed, at home and abroad.

After a decade of standing still, a disproportionate amount of hardship falls on groups that traditionally are less qualified to participate in the information economy.

From the Bureau of Labor Statistics:

In November, both the number of unemployed persons, at 15.4 million, and the unemployment rate, at 10.0 percent, edged down. At the start of the recession in December 2007, the number of unemployed persons was 7.5 million, and the jobless rate was 4.9 percent.

Among the major worker groups, unemployment rates for adult men (10.5 percent), adult women (7.9 percent), teenagers (26.7 percent), whites (9.3 percent), blacks (15.6 percent), and Hispanics (12.7 percent) showed little
change in November. The unemployment rate for Asians was 7.3 percent, not seasonally adjusted.

One characteristic of the lost decade is the stagnation of educational levels. The chart below shows the change in the percentage of people who have graduated high school and college from 1947 to 2003.D885A407-86E5-4356-93DD-BD87ECCE24E8.jpg

There’s clearly incentive for getting an education. The economy provides higher rewards and security to people who have more education. (The chart below shows the figures for 2006 from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.)

It’s striking that since 1970, when higher-paying jobs for unskilled labor (read manufacturing) began to decline as a portion of the overall economy, the level of educational attainment has shown relatively little growth.

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Our economy is paying the price right now for an absence of vision and commitment to creating a workforce with the skills to push and innovate on an even wider margin than we have before.

The test of the next 10 years will be our ability as an economy to find new ways to make things and to put people in the position to do the work.

The technology skills of the newly educated are formidable. The broad absorption of social media tools into the population is an ultimate benefit for creating real-time training in the kind of skills and interactions that are going to be needed to these new ways of making things.

Take a look at one Millenium’s take on the lost decade of music

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The economy needs to create 15 million jobs over the 5 years…here’s 5 million in the next 10

December 15, 2009

Experts suggest that to return to 5% unemployment the economy will need to create about 15 million jobs in the five years. This volume of job creation would satisfy the job needs created by the expansion of the population, while replacing jobs for the recently-unemployed.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics released a projection of the [...]

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What will a long stretch of high unemployment mean?

November 17, 2009

John Mauldin’s letter this week was detail, thought-provoking and important for anyone who is planning their business strategy for the next several years.
Maudlin built on an argument that he introduced a couple of months ago. Drawing on the work of several colleagues, Maudlin empirically demonstrated that the economy was unlikely to replace the volume [...]

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The consumer recovery needs 15 million jobs created in 5 years…a formidable challenge

September 28, 2009

The New York Times this weekend had a stark picture of the imbalance of supply and demand in the employment. Nearly 14.5 million people are out of work and there are only about 2.4 million job openings in the U.S.

Coincidentally, John Mauldin’s letter this Saturday takes a close look at the scale of unemployment [...]

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