RECOMMENDED READING
Markets & Institutions in Real Estate & Construction
By Michael Ball (2006, Blackwell Publishing, RICS Research, 280
pages)
THE GLOBALIZATION OF REAL ESTATE investing is a growing trend, one
that requires among all of us a broader understanding of overseas
markets. Michael Ball, in writing the handy manual Markets &
Institutions in Real Estate & Construction, produces an analysis on
property markets across Europe and how they compare to markets in the
United States.
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At a time when a rising number of American investors are adding
foreign properties to their portfolios, Ball was concerned about the
lack of reference literature that addressed international comparative
analyses exploring housing markets and their relation to planning
systems and real estate institutions, such as the construction industry
and brokerage houses. As a result, he studied how markets are allowed to
respond to demand and how different government programs or industrial
institutions impact delivery of real estate products, especially
housing.
Ball, a professor of property economics and urban studies at the
University of Reading (west of London), has long edited the European
Housing Review, which is published by the Royal Institution of Chartered
Surveyors (RICS). Markets & Institutions in Real Estate &
Construction has been published as part of a RICS research grant.
One of the areas of Ball's focus in this book is on the
stifling housing markets of the U.K. and other European nations. Long
delays in new construction have resulted in housing shortages in the
U.K., where it takes six or more years to deliver new homes. Most other
European countries experience similar, if not longer, timeframes.
Extensive time lags, aggravated by planning rules or lack of suitable
sites, can miss upswings in demand.
Markets & Institutions concludes that of the larger, growing
economies, the U.K. trails all of its European Union counterparts in
meeting housing demands. Stagnant home ownership is the perverse result
of rigid planning policies coupled with government incentives.
Rising prices and values are among the barriers to entry for
prospective homebuyers. With barely a trickle of new land brought into
production, U.K. homebuilders cannot respond to increases in demand.
Ball points out that the U.K. is not alone in failing to ease
housing woes or increasing home ownership within its borders. With the
possible exception of Ireland (now of Celtic Tiger fame, which refers to
Ireland's economic boom of the 1990s), few European countries have
been able to find a way of jumpstarting the housing industry. In
addition, Markets & Institutions also points out that the old Soviet
block economies, still reeling from central planning, have been
extremely slow to respond to rising prices, and no new supply is being
produced.
Ball contrasts the homebuilding industries among European countries
with that of the entrepreneurial homebuilding institution here in the
U.S. Statewide homebuilder associations, comprised of small and large
companies, have created an effective lobbying force at all government
levels. This involvement in the legislative process has assured
favorable tax policies for American homeowners, including home mortgage
deductions. These associations also have balanced the influence of
slow-growth planning organizations that seek to limit urban sprawl.
Ball also addresses the impact that home ownership subsidies have
on property economics for both the construction and brokerage industries
in Europe. Subsidizing increases the incidence of home ownership only
when there is a supply of land and the presence of a local homebuilding
industry to meet the demand. Minus these two components, those with
homes simply get richer, since the infusion of money or easy credit
created by the subsidy simply increases prices without a commensurate
increase in supply.
Ball, in limiting Markets & Institution's focus on EU
surveys, whets our appetite for a similar overview of other
international markets, particularly in Asia. One wonders how the
phenomenal residential construction boom in China, for instance, would
be sustained if that nation's market encountered the same
restraints faced by most EU nations. Ball's study explores select
topics that may have less interest to those hoping to better discern
global megatrends. Thus, the chapter on the controversy revolving around
banks and financial institutions getting into brokerage lacks immediacy,
if not relevance.
On balance, Ball and RICS are part of a professional movement to
integrate academic ideas of economics, measurements and models to the
real world of practitioners. Watch for more from Ball and his colleagues
at RICS as the study of "property economics" begins to eclipse
traditional real estate studies.
Markets & Institutions in Real Estate & Construction is
available for purchase through Blackwell Publishing. Order online at
www.blackwellpublishing.com or call 800.862.6657.
REVIEWED BY P. BARTON DeLACY, CRE, FRICS
About the Reviewer
P. Barton DeLacy, CRE, FRICS, is managing director and national
practice leader for corporate valuation consulting at Cushman &
Wakefield, a New York-based global commercial real estate services firm.
DeLacy also has a masters degree in urban and regional planning from
Portland State University and has served as an adjunct professor in its
business school.
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COPYRIGHT 2007 The Counselors of Real
Estate Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.