Foreclosure Blight Slashes Nation's Property Values

Foreclosed homes are creating blight in urban and suburban areas all across the country, lowering property values by more than $200 billion.

2 minute read

July 2, 2008, 8:00 AM PDT

By Nate Berg


"From Atlanta's urban core to leafy neighborhoods filled with chirping crickets in Charlotte, N.C., some 2.2 million homes are expected to go through foreclosure – and stand empty – by the time the mortgage meltdown ends, according to Global Insight, an economic research firm. As the housing dominoes fall far from Wall Street, growing urban "ghost towns" of vacant houses are resulting in a costly crush of weeds, trash, and dereliction on a scale unseen in American cities since the Great Depression, economists say."

"As a $4 billion package to help municipalities deal with foreclosure-related blight hangs fire in the US Senate, US mayors met last weekend in Miami to vent about the scourge of abandoned homes. Cash-strapped cities are now scrambling – often using on-the-fly ingenuity – to rescue neighborhoods suddenly vulnerable to crime and stunned by millions of dollars in lost equity wrought by loose credit, opportunistic speculators, and predatory lending."

"Some 44.5 million homes in the US now stand next to an empty house, resulting in a drop of at least $5,000 in property value per house. By that calculation, a total loss of home value of $220 billion across the US can be attributed to the vacancy problem."

"'This is a man-made disaster that's had more dramatic impacts on real estate markets than natural disasters [have],' says Bruce Katz, a housing analyst at the Brookings Institution, a think tank in Washington. 'In a way, we have a lot of mini-Katrinas across the country.'"

Tuesday, July 1, 2008 in The Christian Science Monitor

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