I used to live next door to a Russian émigré. One day he asked me to explain
something that puzzled him about his new country. "This place seems very rich,"
he said, "but I never see anyone making anything. How does the country earn its
money?"
The answer, these days, is that we make a living by selling each other
houses. Since December 2000 employment in U.S. manufacturing has fallen 17
percent, but membership in the National Association of Realtors has risen 58
percent.
The housing boom has created jobs in two ways. Many jobs have been created,
directly and indirectly, by a surge in housing construction. And rising home
values have fueled a simultaneous surge in consumer spending.
Let's start with home building. Between 1980 and 2000, which was before the
housing boom, spending on the construction of new homes averaged 4.25 percent of
G.D.P. In the most recent quarter, however, the figure was 5.98 percent. That
difference is equivalent to about $200 billion a year in additional spending,
generating roughly two million extra jobs.
Then there's the jump in house prices. Over the past five years housing
prices have grown much faster than the overall cost of living, adding about $5
trillion to the public's wealth. Typical estimates say that each additional
dollar of housing wealth adds about 3 cents to annual consumer spending, as
families reduce their savings and borrow against their newly valuable homes. So
we're talking about an additional $150 billion in spending, and roughly 1.5
million more jobs.
Does anything else in the U.S. economy rival housing as a source of job
creation? Well, there's also the military buildup. The Economic Policy Institute
estimates that increased military spending over the past four years has created
1.3 million private-sector jobs.
And, yes, there are the Bush tax cuts, which the administration insists are
the source of everything good in the economy. And it's true that some portion of
the tax cuts, which amounted to $225 billion this year, must have been spent in
ways that created jobs. Given reasonable estimates of the effect of tax cuts on
spending, however, they were probably a smaller force for job creation than the
military buildup, and dwarfed by the housing boom.
So it's an economy driven by real estate. What's wrong with that?
One answer is that it has been a pretty disappointing recovery. Two new
reports, one from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities and one from the
Congressional Budget Office, compare the current economic expansion with other
postwar recoveries. By any measure except corporate profits, which have done
very well, this one comes up short.
Even the good months would have been considered subpar in the past: the
administration hailed last month's job growth as something wondrous to behold,
yet there were 68 months during the Clinton years when employment grew
faster.
Still, the economy is expanding. But because that expansion depends so much
on real estate - without the housing boom, the economic picture would look
dismal indeed - you have to wonder how much to trust it.
I've written before about the reasons to believe that current house prices in
much of the country represent a bubble. When that bubble begins to deflate, so
will housing-related employment.
Beyond that, there's the disturbing point that we're paying for the housing
boom (and the military buildup and tax cuts) with money borrowed from
foreigners.
Now, any economics textbook will tell you that it's fine to borrow from
abroad if the money is used to expand the economy's productive capacity. When
19th-century America borrowed from Europe to build railroads, it was also
enhancing its ability to repay its debts later. But we aren't borrowing to build
productive capacity. As a share of G.D.P., investment other than housing
construction is below its average between 1980 and 2000, and way below its level
at the end of the 1990's.
In other words, a fuller answer to my former neighbor would be that these
days, Americans make a living selling each other houses, paid for with money
borrowed from the Chinese. Somehow, that doesn't seem like a sustainable
lifestyle.
How solid, then, is America's economic recovery? The British have a phrase
that applies: "safe as houses." Our economy is as safe as houses. Unfortunately,
given current prices and our dependence on foreign lenders, houses aren't safe
at all.