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And most people overestimate the tax benefits. They don't realize the standard deduction they would get if they didn't itemize might be nearly as great as their housing deduction, says Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington. For example, a homeowner with a $200,000 mortgage might pay $11,000 a year in interest and $2,000 in property taxes. That's $13,000
-- a healthy deduction, but just $2,100 more than the standard deduction of $10,900 for those married filing jointly. And as a homeowner pays less each month toward interest and more toward principal, the deduction will shrink
-- until it falls below the standard deduction, which rises to keep up with inflation, Baker says. Of course, paying principal builds equity and is the equivalent of a forced savings plan, which can finance big expenses such as college tuition. In the long run, many people fund their retirement partly by selling a home they've owned for many years and moving into smaller, cheaper housing.
Another reason to buy a house is it's a leveraged investment; you pay only a fraction of the price with your own money, which can produce an enormous return. If you make a down payment of 10 percent on a $200,000 house and it doubles in value to $400,000, your $20,000 investment has grown to $220,000, a return of 1,000 percent. That's like buying a $40 stock and watching it soar to $440. But how can you tell in the short run whether it's better to buy or rent? There's a way to gauge how expensive homes are
-- the price-to-rent ratio. The ratio is determined by dividing the price of a home by the annual rent that could be earned from it. Since 1986, the ratio has averaged 9. Anything above that suggests it may be better to rent, depending on your area. After soaring to 15 at the end of 2005 -- above 20 in some areas -- the nationwide ratio has dropped back to 10, according to Economy.com data, making ownership far more attractive. Prospective buyers can do the price-to-rent calculation themselves. For example, if you can purchase a home for $180,000 but can rent a similar one for $18,000 a year ($1,500 a month), your price-to-rent ratio would be 10, making the buying price reasonable and close to average. And you would have the tax benefits and equity that you don't get with renting. It would be nice to say home prices rise reliably and steadily -- and a few years ago they seemed to. But that "sure thing" is no longer. Short-term prospects are cloudy. Many economists expect home prices to keep falling through 2010 as mounting unemployment, foreclosures and a glut of unsold homes all weigh on the housing market. Robert Shiller, a Yale University economist and co-inventor of the Case-Shiller index, says he expects home prices to be roughly flat for five years. Yet housing has proved a good investment if you stick with it. And with prices already having fallen so far, buying now could make it an even better one.
[Associated
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