speeches · November 8, 1971
Regional President Speech
Bruce K. MacLaury · President
THE FED LOOKS AT HOME FINANCING
Remarks
by
Bruce K, MacLaury
President
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
at
meeting of the
MINNESOTA MORTGAGE BANKERS ASSOCIATION
Town & Country Club
St. Paul, Minnesota
November 9, 1971
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Summary of points made by Lyle E. Gramley in "Short-term Cycles in
Housing Production: An Overview of the Problem and Possible Solutions11
Fed Staff Study - 20 individual papers dealing with means to lessen
cyclical variability of housing production.
STAFF - some obvious comments
some novel conclusions
FOCUS - a search for practical ways of reducing cyclical
variability without unacceptable side-effects on
economic stabilization.
Basic Conflict: Housing cycles are counter
cyclical. Damping housing cycle throws burden
on other sectors.
BACKGROUND
1. Early post-war period: single family (until late r50fs) multi
family starts less than 200,000 p.a.
457o
Today, multi-family account for of total. Once became
important, just as prone to financing cycles as single-family.
In early cyclical slumps, Government-guaranteed mortgages
affected more than conventional (*55-57 and *59-60)
In f66, both affected equally; in f69-70, Government
guaranteed actually rose.
2. Housing cycle not unique to U.S. Common experience despite
differences in financing techniques, financial institutions,
and social characteristics.
3. Significant downtrend in ratio of residential construction to
over last 20 years: early f50fs = 5%; last half of f60!s = 3%%.
GNP
Causes: 1. age structure of population
2. backlog of demand when depression and World War II
3. multi-family unites, mobile homes - less cost per family
4. secular rise in interest rates
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Conclusion: non-financial factors explain greater part of
secular decline in residential construction as
percent of GNP.
Evidence - early f60fs when interest rates
remained low for long time - only 4%%.
4. Despite rising interest rates and smaller percent of GNP, nation’s
housing problem has eased in last 20 years.
Evidence:
(497o) 20
a. Housing stock has increased faster in last years than:
1) total population: 34%,
2) families: 30%
3) households: 44%
1970,
b. By overcrowding declined to lowest level on record:
units with more than one person per room = 8.2% of occupied
1970 11.5% f60 15.87o 1950.
dwellings in vs in and in
c • Quality has improved
9.47o
Units lacking complete plumbing in *68
18.2% 60
in 1
36.9% 50
in 1
Conclusion: situation still not satisfactory, but short
swings in construction have not stopped major
progress. Problems today structural, not total
i.e., inner city and rural. (not a financial
problem)
Genera^conclusion: ,fXt seems clear that variations in the
rate of housing activity have reached a magnitude that is
socially and politically intolerable; if moderation of these
swings is achieved, however, the goal of overall economic
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stability will suffer unless greater stability in housing
activity is accompanied by changes that force other sectors
to bear a greater share of the burden.” (p. 13)
ROLE OF FINANCING IN CYCLICAL HOUSING SWINGS
1. Econometric studies seem to confirm common belief that financial
variables are key elements in explaining short-term fluctuations
in residential construction.
Most, though not all, think that financial variables act
primarily on demand for housing, not supply (i.e. financing
of contractors).
2. Cyclical swing in housing a problem well before disintermediation,
though this has had major impact in last two cycles.
Contractions in flows in f50ys reflected mainly reductions
in mortgage acquisitions by diversified lenders - still
important. (commercial banks, life insurance companies, and
mutuals)
3. Disintermediation: partly reflects ceiling on interest rates, but
more fundamentally, the inflexibility of savings institutions in
periods of fluctuating interest rates.
(Between 1965 and 1969, yields on new conventional mortgages rose
two percentage points; return on assets of S & Lfs 0.6 percentage
points.)
4. New element: growing role of Federally sponsored agencies.
5. Reasons for differential impact on housing and business of credit
RESTRAINT:
a. Housing depends for financing largely on specialized
depositary institutions, whose sources of funds are not
diversified.
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Business firms have many different alternatives.
Moreover, volume of new credit extended to business firms
by principal diversified lenders typically irises when
growth rate of their total loans and investments falls,
b. Impact of usury laws.
Ill PUBLIC POLICY IMPLICATIONS
1. While agreement that present swings in housing activity too large, complete
elimination of fluctuations would not be a desirable goal, even if feasible.
Reason: desirable to restrict production of highly durable goods»
like housing, during periods of excess aggregate demand. (Because
restraint on real resources can be achieved without undue sacrifice
of current consumption, since housing is "consumed" over long period.)
2. Main institutional reforms needed; those that reduce exposure of depositary
institutions to interest rate fluctuations.
i. .
Us uary ceilings ought to b2e* abandoned. Likewise the ceiling on FHA/VA
interest rates (Phase II makes this an awkward time to push this.)
a. Improved functioning of depositary institutions essential to
reduced cycles, but also to capacity of the institutions to
function safely.
Although letting market forces work freely in recent past
3.
might have had disastrous effects on institutions, must remove
ceilings deposit interest rates and attack underlying problems
of asset and liability rigidity.
b. Merit to view that specialized non-bank intermediaries have out
lived usefulness, and should be merged into commercial banking
system. HOWEVER, effects of such a move during next decade
on availability of mortgage credit might be seriously adverse.
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c. In near future, best prospect for better balance between
maturity structure of assets and liabilities lies in efforts
. differ!
to lengthen structure of liabilities through differentiation. certifi
Liability Possibility of lfbonus accounts” with penalty for early with- cates
Structure
drawal. Or tax incentives (or subsidies) for long-term accounts.
Or higher reserve requirements for institutions with short
maturities.
d. Asset diversification
1) Installment loans. General rate advantage of 100 points
Asset
Structure over mortgages, plus faster payout. Possibly 10% of assets.
2) 2) Variable rate mortgages.
Inappropriate for public policy to encourage, or force
borrowers to assume all risk of interest rate fluctuations -
need compromise. Might use link to intermediate government
bond (3-5 years) to avoid short and long. Probably easier
to sell a fixed payment mortgage with variable maturity than
variable payment - at discount from fixed rate.
No quick answer.
3. Federal Agencies
better secondary market
Originally to increase secular flow into mortgages/ ; now counter-cyclical
role. (Secular flow increase has greatest hope in GNMA programs - by
mid f71, $3.9 billion in mortgage backed securities: $1.6 billion bond
type; $2.3 billion pass-through)
Limits to role of agencies:
a. Cause disintermediation
b. Rising interest rates threaten financial viability of agencies.
matched structure of assets & liabilities (FNMA) - same as S & L’s.
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c. To extent successful, frustrate effectiveness of monetary
policy, and thrust burden on next weakest - state and local,
and small business.
CONCLUSION: d. Probably went as far in 1969 as useful to go.
(Estimate of marginal disintermediation: 50$ per $1.)
4. Fiscal Policy
Single most important contribution to stable credit markets: a more
active fiscal policy.
Conclusions:
a. For totals - hope for improvement lies in varying tax rates rather
than expenditures.
b. For particular better to apply subsidies and taxes to expenditures
other than housing, i.e. since housing counter-cyclical, attack pro
cyclical itself, so won’t frustrate general counter-cyclical policy,
e.g. consumer durables, taxes on investment goods (like investment
tax credit, but would apply to all firms investing, not just
profitable).
c. Business investment fund
Rather than variable tax/subsidy on investment, require contri
bution to fund, and permit withdrawals depending on phase of
cycle. Rationale: 1) business investment outlays large and
cyclically volatile, and not sensitive to general monetary policy.
2) can’t always stimulate hou$ing; have to restrict something!
5. Other possibilities considered and rejected
a. Variable reserve requirements on assets,
b. Mandatory purchase of mortgages by pension funds, etc.
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c. Favoring financing of new housing over existing.
d. Restricting borrowing by businesses - as distinguished from
providing incentives to invest.
IV LONG RUN PROSPECTS FOR HOUSING - 1980
Assumptions: 1. No change in institutional arrangements.
2. Cyclically neutral
3. Strong housing activity: 3.7% of GNP vs 3.3% last five years.
4. Strong demand for business investment
(Nuclear power, pollution control, etc.)
5. Balanced federal budget.
6. grows 4 1/2%
Conclusion: funds from private lenders not sufficient to permit volume
of residential construction = 3.7% GNP.
Two reasons: 1. non-bank financial institutions not likely to recoup
share of savings characteristic of earlier periods.
2. Home mortgages less attractive as emphasis on equity
npiece of action" has increased.
(Could consider equity-linked home mortgages,
or invlation-hedged through link to CPI - but
public policy shouldn’t force such links*)
Probably have to count on public institutions (like Federal Agencies) to
supply about 10%.
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Cite this document
APA
Bruce K. MacLaury (1971, November 8). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19711109_bruce_k_maclaury
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_19711109_bruce_k_maclaury,
author = {Bruce K. MacLaury},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {1971},
month = {Nov},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19711109_bruce_k_maclaury},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}