Houses cheaper than cars in Detroit

Tue, 03/20/2007 - 1:40pm

Need any more proof that the bottom is falling out of the U.S. housing market? Look no further than Detroit, where it's cheaper to buy a house than a used car:


iStockphoto.com

At least 16 Detroit houses up for sale on Sunday sold for $30,000 or less.

A boarded-up bungalow on the city's west side brought $1,300. A four-bedroom house near the original Motown recording studio sold for $7,000.

Sure, Detroit is something of a special case, given that it has famously fallen on hard times, hemorrhaging jobs for more than a decade and struggling to cope with a poverty rate ringing in at over 30 percent. Nobody's saying that as Detroit goes, so goes the rest of the country. But it's certainly a troubling case study in a housing climate that will no doubt see a rash of foreclosures across the country as the subprime mortgages crisis continues. People are going to be defaulting on home loans left and right—a recent report estimated more than 2 million Americans could lose their homes because of the lending crisis—and that's not going to spell growth for the U.S. economy. Economist Nouriel Roubini writes:

The sub-prime and overall mortgage carnage is now likely to lead to a financial crisis whose cleanup and bailout costs will make the S&L bailout bill look like spare change.

Hang on to your shirts. 

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