Opinion
Why You Should Care / Mar. 2, 2009 at 8:45 pm

Why you should care about the mortgage interest deduction

If you’re young — and if you’re reading this, you probably are — the tax code hates you. Well, if you live in a dorm, the tax code probably doesn’t hate you, but if you rent it sure does. And if you’re like the 80 percent of people under 25 who rent, or if you’re going to be one of the two thirds of people aged 25-29 who rent, then the tax code really, really hates you. And even worse, this tax disadvantage for the young and renting population, the mortgage interest deduction, also has the negative side effect of favoring the rich — encouraging the building of bigger homes, driving up home prices and doing very little to encourage home ownership.

The mortgage interest deduction, which allows people to deduct the interest payments they make on their home mortgage loans from their stated incomes, is one of the most visible manifestations of America’s obsession with homeownership. And while owning a home is still part of the American Dream for many young people, the basket of policies pursued by the state, local and federal governments to encourage home ownership makes little sense and does more harm than good.

Beyond all the specific inefficiencies and harms associated with the tax, there is the basic fact that it benefits a certain demographic. The people who are most likely to rent are the young with low incomes, who are, not coincidentally, those who are least likely to have their interests represented in government. This younger population is also more likely to have most of their money in the form of income or wages, as opposed to stocks, bonds and dividends, which are all taxed at a lower rate. Basically, those who could most use a deduction on their incomes are the ones not getting it.

Economist Ed Glaeser of Harvard University has written that the deduction is ill-targeted, regressive, encourages the buying of larger and larger homes and does little to actually encourage home ownership. It’s regressive because it most benefits the people who buy the most expensive houses. Not only do they get the largest deduction, but since they are in the highest tax brackets, they get the biggest benefit from the deduction.

But helping the rich isn’t the only problem. Even worse, it encourages the wealthy to buy the most expensive house possible and it encourages everyone else to buy houses they can’t really afford. That’s because as long as home prices are going up (which, for most of the people who have mortgages, they were), the buyer can just sell the house if they ever fall behind on their mortgage payments. The reason the deduction encourages people to spend even more is because their tax benefit goes up with the amount of interest they are paying. And, as we know all too well, encouraging people to take out loans to bet on home prices going up indefinitely hasn’t exactly turned out well in the past few years. Not only is there massive human misery due to foreclosures when the prices go down, but the deduction also helps stoke the upward spiral in home prices, making the resulting crash all the more horrible.

One would think that assisting one of the worst asset price crashes in American history would be bad enough, but it turns out that little deduction also screws over the environment. Glaeser writes that the deduction makes it easier for people “to buy larger, single-family detached homes, and that increases carbon emissions and pushes people out of cities.” And since we all know that global warming is a problem, having government tax policy encourage environmentally unfriendly living arrangements hardly makes sense.

In many ways, the deduction is a perfect representation of what’s screwed up about our politics. Not only does it help those who need to be helped least, but it has just about zero defenders among those who seriously think about policy. And yet, because it benefits a powerful group in very visible ways while hurting everyone else more subtly, this nasty bit of our tax code is likely to stay around for a while.

So what should we do? Obviously, we can’t just get rid of the deduction right now. Home prices are already spiraling downward, so we hardly need to be encouraging their descent. Instead, we could phase it out over, say, 10 years. Still, the focus shouldn’t just be on this one tax deduction, but instead on the political system which produces policies that help those who need it the least.

Also on NBN

Why care about the mortgage deduction when you can just skate? Or you can return home.

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Comments

  1. thanks for making me feel even more effed over than I already did. but seriously, informative. thanks.

    wow

    March 3, 2009 at 1:42 am

  2. Actually, interest expense is also deductible for those who own rental property, so as a renter you benefit from that same deduction. If Landlords were not able to deduct that expense it would just be added in to their other expenses as they decide what rent to charge.

    My suggestion to all of you 20-somethings is to live simply and pay as you go. Save enough money to put down a large down payment on a small house and pay it off as soon as you can. A mortgage is something you are shackled to until it is paid off. Trust me, I’ve had one and paid it off, paid off is better. Many of my friends in much larger homes thought I was stupid for not “cashing in on the deduction”. As bad as the economy is and as bad as my other investments are doing I don’t have to worry about having to make a mortgage payment on a house that may be worth less than the debt that is on it. Some of my friends are now trying to sell homes into one of the worst real estate markets in our lifetime to get out from under those mortgages. I’m sure you smart guys can research the etymology of “mortgage” but a translation from the Old French is “dead pledge”, and that’s what they feel like.

    I would agree that the tax code hates you, but in reality it hates everyone. If you want to feel the love take a look at a flat tax or national consumption tax and do away with all other taxes. The current system is rife with corruption and handouts to private interests, the fact that Dems are in control will only change the names or styles of the groups who get unnecessary stupid tax breaks to try and drive behavior. Also, call or email your representative and tell them instead of posting here. Unless a certain amount of hell is raised it won’t change.

    Oh, and vote Libertarian.

    old dude

    March 3, 2009 at 8:11 am

  3. This is the most rediculous point of view I’ve read in a while.

    Young people need to be focusing thier income on real investments, like real estate. I know that it has ups and downs, but at least its an investment in something real, not a designer hand bag, or a night out at the bar.

    I am 26, and have owned a reasonable priced ($137,000 when I bought it, probably only worth 134,000 now, but it will come back, I am being patient. I did not buy more than I could afford, so I will continue to make my mortgage paments) condo for a year and a half now. The mortage interest deduction has saved me money. If 20 somethings would save money, be patient, and not think that the first home they buy has to be a 250,000 house, our ecomny wouldn’t be in the shape it’s in now.

    Megan

    March 4, 2009 at 9:53 am

  4. Ah, yes, Megan, you’re absolutely right. Our economy is in horrible shape because of young people. How silly of us to not invest in a falling real estate market. Thank you for pointing that out.

    As far as investing money in designer bags or a night out at the bar…well…I don’t think anyone considers those to be investments. But if they were “investments,” I’d invest my money in a night out at a bar, enjoying myself with my friends, over a faltering real estate investment any day.

    People grow up way too fast as it is. I don’t intend on investing in real estate any earlier than I need to.

    Kate

    March 5, 2009 at 10:23 pm

  5. Who are “the rich” or “the wealthy”? What’s the number? Yearly income, net worth? How much? What’s the crossover point where someone goes from being a good person to evil rich person?

    “Not only does it help those who need to be helped least” – really? How so?

    Rob

    April 1, 2009 at 5:08 pm

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