| Title: | Tomorrow's Suburbs Will Be Grayer; Tomorrow's Home Buyers Will Increasingly Be Young Minorities |
| Source: | MBA |
| Date: | 11/27/2006 |
WASHINGTON, D.C. (November 27, 2006) — The most significant factors impacting housing over the coming years are whether aging baby boomers decide to grow old where
they are and where young immigrants decide to settle, according to a new study released today by the Mortgage Bankers Association.
The study, “America’s Regional Demographics in the ‘00s Decade: The Role of Seniors, Boomers and New Minorities,” conducted
by William H. Frey of the Brookings Institution and sponsored by the MBA’s Research Institute for Housing America (RIHA),
analyzes two components driving the changes that will transform the U.S. population over the next several decades — aging
boomers, and immigration of Hispanics and Asians.
It finds that the overall U.S. population will experience a rapid aging as boomers grow older, while absorbing large numbers
of young recent immigrants. Different regions of the country will have different demands for housing driven by the relative
impacts of aging in place versus migration within the country and immigration from abroad. For example, suburban areas will
gray faster than urban areas due to the boomers aging in place.
“It has been said that demographics are the future that has already happened and demographic changes are one of the most powerful
forces impacting the residential and commercial real estate and real estate finance markets. Therefore the real estate industry
needs to appreciate these important trends. This study provides insightful analyses of current statistics and valuable projections
regarding how these trends will likely play out nationally and regionally in the years ahead,” said Doug Duncan, MBA’s Chief
Economist and Senior Vice President of Research and Business Development. “We expect that this study will help our members
develop business plans to meet the ever changing American marketplace.”
Key findings from the study include:
Regional Differences in Aging Patterns
• Senior populations can increase through in-migration or through aging in place. However, aging in place is the dominant
force that will shape demographic changes in the years ahead.
• Even in Arizona, which shows the highest rates of net in-migration, the migration effect is dwarfed by the effect of the
existing population simply getting older and not moving.
• The most dramatic impact of aging in place will be in parts of the country which are not now associated with aging populations,
like Nevada, Colorado, or Georgia. These states that will exhibit the fastest senior growth are not necessarily the ones
that have the highest percentage of seniors. States with high senior shares have typically experienced one or more decades
of sustained declines in their younger populations. This leaves behind seniors who are far less likely to move than people
in their 20s and 30s.
• Suburbs will be the fastest graying part of our national landscape. In projections of Philadelphia and Chicago, for example,
suburbs will begin to age faster than cities, even though both cities start out having older populations than their suburbs.
• While close to 30 percent of young households move each year to a new residence that percentage slides down to the 4–5 percent
range for people in older age groups. Therefore, household mobility that has been a major driver of home sales will fall
off as boomers age.
• Less than 2 percent of residents aged 55–64 move across state lines in any one year and the percentage is even less for
those over 65. The aggregate number of interstate moves among those aged 55 and over is dwarfed by the number of moves undertaken
by the younger population, meaning fewer moves as a larger portion of the population is over 55.
• Well-off young senior populations will emerge in areas like Las Vegas, NV, Denver, CO, Dallas, TX and Atlanta, GA.
Greater Dispersion of Minorities
• While it is popular to think of the United States as a melting pot, Hispanic, Asian and other minority groups are disproportionately
clustered in selected areas.
• What has changed is the ‘hold’ that the traditional immigrant gateways have on the Hispanic population. In 1990, the top
10 metropolitan areas were home to fully 55 percent of all US Hispanics, and the top 2, Los Angeles and New York, housed nearly
3 in 10 Hispanics nationwide. In 2005, however, less than half of all Hispanics live in the top 10 areas and Los Angeles and
New York are home to only 22 percent. When one examines the far reaches of Hispanic dispersion nearly one third of all counties
in the United States have at least 5 percent of their populations that are Hispanic, compared with one out of 6 in 1990.
• The vast majority of Hispanics and Asians speak English at home, and those that do not, can communicate in English very
well.
• These new minorities are also relatively young compared with the rest of the population, suggesting that racial generation
gaps are emerging in areas where they live in large numbers. That is, young adults up to age 40 in these areas, show a strong
representation of new Hispanic and Asian households, whereas the ‘over 40’ crowd is still dominated heavily by white and black
baby boomers.
• Minorities tend to be younger and as such are highly mobile. Four out of 10 young Hispanics or blacks changed residence
over the 2004–05 period. Nearly one out of 10 Hispanics, and more than one out of seven Asian movers, came directly from
abroad.
• Overall, 15 of the nation’s 88 large metropolitan areas have majority minority populations.
New Regions Defined by Demographic Changes
• “New Minority States” where Asians and Hispanics currently account for about 1/3 of the population. (NY, NJ, FL, IL, TX,
NM, AZ, NV, and CA)
• “Faster Growing States” contain many suburban communities and attract migration from the rest of the country as well as
from recent immigrants. This group of states will have the highest rate of growth for the 55 and over population. (NH, MD,
VA, NC, SC, GA, TN, CO, UT, ID, OR, and WA)
• “White-Black Slower Growing States” and “Mostly White Slower Growing States” will have the lowest rate of overall population
growth, but will gray rapidly through aging in place, and will have the highest shares of seniors. (OH, MI, AL, MS, LA, AR,
MO, DC, ME, VT, MA, CT, RI, PA, WV, KY, IN, MN, WI, IA, ND, SD, NE, OK, KS, WY, MT)
To obtain a copy of the report, please visit the RIHA website at http://housingamerica.org/docs/6694_00Demographics_WP_WB.pdf
About the Research Institute for Housing America:
The Research Institute for Housing America of the Mortgage Bankers Association is a 501(c)(3) trust fund. Its chief purpose
is to encourage and aid - through grants and sponsored research to distinguished scholars, educational institutions, research
facilities, and government organizations - the pursuit of knowledge of mortgage markets and real estate finance. Its mission
emphasizes rigorous analysis furthering understanding of how to expand rental opportunities and home ownership among the underserved,
and how to encourage equal access to mortgage credit for all qualified borrowers. For additional information, visit: http://www.housingamerica.org/index.htm.
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The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) is the national association representing the real estate finance industry, an industry
that employs more than 280,000 people in virtually every community in the country. Headquartered in Washington, D.C., the
association works to ensure the continued strength of the nation's residential and commercial real estate markets; to expand
homeownership and extend access to affordable housing to all Americans. MBA promotes fair and ethical lending practices and
fosters professional excellence among real estate finance employees through a wide range of educational programs and a variety
of publications. Its membership of over 2,200 companies includes all elements of real estate finance: mortgage companies,
mortgage brokers, commercial banks, thrifts, Wall Street conduits, life insurance companies and others in the mortgage lending
field. For additional information, visit MBA's Web site: www.mortgagebankers.org.