Debts-R-Us

Report: Steeply higher mortgages and school loans squeeze U.S. households

By Andrea Coombes, MarketWatch

Last Update: 8:42 PM ET May 11, 2006

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Americans' debt levels are rising, but
not because we can't resist charging the latest plasma television to
our credit card, according to a new report.

Instead, consumers' debt burden jumped higher in recent years because
wages grew slowly even as costs increased on items that most of us
don't consider frivolous, such as mortgages, health insurance and
college tuition, according to a study by the Center for American
Progress, a liberal think-tank, in Washington, D.C.

Middle-income families felt squeezed more than most, devoting a median
20% of their income to debt payments in 2004 - even at a time of low
interest rates -- up from 18% in 2001. U.S. households overall spent a
median 18.3% of income on debt payments in 2004, up from 16.9% in
2001, according to the report, which is based largely on data from the
Federal Reserve Board's Survey of Consumer Finances.

And more families entered the group of seriously indebted: 13.7% of
households faced debt payments greater than 40% percent of their
income in 2004, up from 12.8% in 2001.
Looking at households' overall debt load, Americans' debt rose to a
median 108% of income in 2004, up from 78% of income in 2001, with
middle-income people facing the steepest rise, to a median 114% of
income from 80% in 2001, according to the report.

"The middle-class squeeze [is driven by] stagnant income growth in the
face of very sharp price increases for big-ticket items such as homes
and education," said Christian Weller, author of the report and a
senior economist with the Center for American Progress.

Weller doesn't discount the fact that some people's debt is due more
to a lust for consumer goods than an investment in the future by
buying a home or education.

"People do buy plasma screen TVs when they can't afford it," he said.

But that's "just a small part of the overall story. All of those
consumer credit items are dwarfed by education loans or home loans,"
he said.

"You'd have to buy a ton of plasma screen TVs to come to the same
result that you see from rising home loans and education loans," he
said.

Mortgage, education debt on the rise

U.S. households owed a median of $7,800 in education loans in 2004, up
26% from $6,178 in 2001, while the median mortgage loan amount rose to
$96,000 in 2004, up almost 24% from $77,752 in 2001, according to the
report. See the full report.

In the 1970s, a typical family was spending about half of earnings on
big fixed expenses, including mortgage payments, health care and
taxes, said Elizabeth Warren, a professor at Harvard University, on a
teleconference call with Weller to announce the report.

"A generation later, the two-income family is making much more money
but that money is divided differently," she said. "Seventy-five
percent of what they jointly bring home now is committed" to those
same expenses. "Today's two-income family doesn't need 52 paychecks to
make the mortgage payment. It needs 104 paychecks to make the mortgage
payment. If either mom or dad gets laid off, they're out of luck," she
said.

Another view: Signs of growth

Plus, U.S. households' debt has ramifications for the overall economy,
Weller said, noting that as interest rates rise, consumption will slow
down. As a remedy, he suggests public policy changes, such as higher
minimum wage levels, greater access to tax benefits such as the Earned
Income Tax Credit, plus health-care system changes to lower costs.

Still, other economists view indebtedness differently: Their take is
that people choose to go into debt, it's difficult to know exactly
what drives that choice, and the same statistics that point to steep
debt -- such as higher mortgage-loan amounts -- also imply economic
success.

"A fact is that homeownership in the U.S. right now is at an all-time
high. That suggests it's gotten easier for people to afford their
houses," said Russ Roberts, a professor of economics at George Mason
University, in Fairfax, Va.

"We're borrowing more for housing than we did before," Roberts said.
"Is that good or bad? It's bad if you can't finance the rest of your
life after you've done that. The question would be why do people do
it?" he said. "One interpretation of that is things are good because
we can afford bigger houses and more expensive houses than we did
before."

While Weller, the report's author, says more homeowners would buy
smaller, cheaper houses if such houses were available near their
workplaces, Roberts suggests consumer demand is driving a trend toward
bigger homes.

"The size of the house, the number of bedrooms, those are all up over
the last 20 years for sure. This would suggest this is not a function
of economic hardship but economic success," Roberts said.

He has a similar take on college costs. "Right now, the proportion of
college-age people in college is at an all-time high," he said. "Is
that a crisis or is that a good thing? It means we're wealthy enough
as a nation to have enough money that more people can afford to go to
college than ever before," he said.

And, he says, rising costs, whether for college loans or anything
else, are offset by lower costs for other goods. "Increasing one cost
and holding everything else constant means it's gotten more costly,
but you can't hold everything else constant. Many things have gotten
cheaper," Roberts said, pointing to electronic consumer goods, and
services such as telephone calls.

"People have choices. They're not pleasant sometimes. If you choose to
spend more on your house and your income hasn't changed, you're going
to have to take fewer vacations, work harder, take a second job, go
without, buy a new car less often, and of course people do that very
often."

For her part, Warren, the Harvard professor, says public policy
changes are important, but individuals also need to consider their
choices.

For instance, "large fixed expenses should not be more than 50% of
your income. If you live in an area where you feel you must go heavy
in housing, then you've got to cut back in all other fixed expenses.
High mortgage payment? Drive a clunker and take public transportation.
Get by on one car," she said.

Still, "there are forces bearing down on middle-class families that
require them to make choices that many of us would find unacceptable,
and we need to have some vision of that when we make public policy
choices," she said, noting that some people decide to not purchase
health insurance because they can't afford it.

"What it took to survive in the middle class in the 1970s is simply
not adequate today."

--
Jim Devine / "the world still seems stuck in greed-lock, ruled by
fossilized fools fueled by fossil fuels." -- Swami Beyondananda

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