The cost, efficacy and fairness of the mortgage interest deduction (MID) are part of nearly every discussion in Washington about the tax code, housing policy, or the budget and there appear to be about six sides to every debate. Economists from the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) have weighed in with responses to what they say are 10 "claims" about MID.
Claim #1: Benefits of the MID
accrue mostly to the wealthy. NAHB says 86 percent of households
benefiting from MID have incomes under $200,000. That figure often
includes two household incomes.
Claim #2: Eliminating MID
would not damage the economy or individual households. "Almost
all studies" find it would reduce demand for housing which would
lower home values for existing home owners. This would reduce
household wealth, put mortgages under water thus increasing defaults
and foreclosures, and reduce property tax revenues and thus local
services. Even a 1 percent decline in home prices would cost
American households $185 billion in net worth.
Claim #3: Only
a small percentage of home owners claim the MID. Seventy percent
of home owners with a mortgage claim the MID in a given year, and
almost all home owners benefit from the deduction at some point
during their homeownership life cycle. Many mortgaged households do
not take the deduction in the later years of a mortgage when interest
payments are small but probably had done so in earlier years.
Claim
#4: Repealing the deduction would make the tax code more
progressive. Repealing the MID would result in larger tax hikes
- as a share of household income - for the middle class. For example,
for households with less than $200,000 in adjusted gross income, the
typical mortgage interest deduction is worth 1.76 percent of that
family's AGI. For taxpayers reporting more than $200,000 in income,
the benefit falls to 1.5 percent of AGI.
Claim #5: The
mortgage interest deduction incentivizes buyers to purchase a larger
home. While MID may have some relation to home size, evidence
ties the choice of housing size more directly to family size and
underlying housing demand.
Claim #6: Renters do not
support the mortgage interest deduction. Public opinion polling
has generally found the MID to be popular with renters, most of whom
hope to become home owners.
Claim #7: Because mortgages on
second homes also qualify for the MID, taxpayers are subsidizing
vacation homes for the wealthy. The second home deduction also
applies to families who own two homes in a single year as they move
from one to another or build a new residence. Where second homes are
seasonal the MID helps areas where the economy relies on
recreation/tourism. Also, the Consumer Expenditure Survey found the
average income of a household with a mortgage on a second home is
$71,344.
Claim #8: While the MID supports homeownership,
federal policy neglects renters.
In dollar terms Housing policy support is roughly
proportional to the renter/owner ratio in the total population.
Claim #9: Since not all home owners itemize, a credit would be better for the market. This would depend on how the credit was structured, that is its size and what it includes. Some current proposals would increase the tax burden on homeowners.
Claim #10: There is too much policy
support for housing. Discussions of tax policy focus on the
federal level and often ignore the tax burden placed on homeowners on
the state and local levels.
NAHB said its information
refuting the ten claims is derived from the Internal Revenue
Services, the Census Bureau, and estimates from other sources.