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Housing Demand and Supply Demand • Related to: – Price – Income – Demographics Hhsize = 2 • HH Size • “Life Cycle” Hhsize = 6 High income Low income Housing, h Income Elasticities • If our income increases by $500, do we move? Why? • Economists feel that the appropriate measure to use is “permanent income,” related to wealth. • Permanent income elasticities are probably somewhere between 0.5 and 1.0. Best guess may be 0.5 to 0.7. Discuss. Price Elasticities • Think back. How did we get price of housing? • Is a $100,000 house half as expensive (per unit housing) as a $200,000 house? • Presumably price of housing decreases as you move further out. Why? • Most estimates of price elasticity of demand are less elastic than -1.0 (between 0 and -1.0) Price Elasticity and Expenditures • Price elasticity is probably around -0.7 in absolute value. • Suppose you own a house worth $100,000, and value is a straight multiple of rents (housing prices). • As you move further out, price of housing falls by 20%, and that price elasticity is -0.7. What happens to expenditures? • E = (% D Q)/ (% D P). Price Elasticity and Expenditures • E = (% D Q)/ (% D P). • -0.7 = (% D Q) / (-0.2) -- Why? • 0.14 = (% D Q) So, we’re buying 14% more housing, at 80% of the previous price. New house will cost: V* = 100 * (1.14) * (0.8) V* = 91.2. Our expenditures . Moving Costs • Changing housing consumption is costly. Why? • You have to MOVE. – Search costs – “Adventure in moving” • O’Sullivan gives one graph. I’m going to give you a different one. Suppose • You just got married. • You want 2 kids. • You expect your income to go up a little bit each year. • Moving is a pain. • What do you do? Adjustment w/o Moving costs Late y Early y Housing, h BUT • If you move it costs you … and you KNOW it Adjustment w/ Moving costs Late y Early y • INSTEAD, you buy a little more, early … • And a little less, late. Housing, h What happens? • You avoid the moving costs. • Point here, is that households don’t move every time their incomes change … • Or every time the housing price changes. • We want a story that is realistic. Supply • Think, for now, of housing as entirely rental stock. • What do we know? – It is durable. Dwellings can last for 100 years or more. – Most of our housing supply comes from “used” stock, rather than new stock. – Supply of services is pretty inelastic. Only 2 to 3% of the housing on the market in any year is new. Housing Services and Housing Supply $ of rent • Assume owner has bought the house new. • Rents it at $1 per/unit of services. • Provides Q*. Why? Excel - OS_CH14 Revenue Maximum Profits Cost Q* Quantity of services, Q Housing Services and Housing Supply $ of rent • What happens as house gets older? • A> more expensive to maintain Revenue Maximum Profits Cost • We provide less of it. Q** Q* Quantity of services, Q Marginal Analysis • House ages, provide less MC $ MR • Price (MR) rises, provide more Quantity Q*