Showing posts with label "housing conference". Show all posts
Showing posts with label "housing conference". Show all posts

Monday, June 13, 2011

"Sifting and winnowing" at the Wisconsin Real Estate & Economic Outlook Conference

On Thursday, June 9, the Graaskamp Center held our annual service conference for the state, the Wisconsin Real Estate and Economic Outlook Conference. Academic Director Stephen Malpezzi delivered the following opening remarks:

I'm very proud to be associated with this conference. I want to thank all the speakers and presenters, and especially all of you in the audience, for making this conference a success.

The Wisconsin Idea tells us that the University needs to be connected to real problems and issues faced by Wisconsinites as well as those beyond our physical borders, in the rest of the nation and indeed around the globe. It is our basic job description. As I look over the agenda I think we've put together a meeting that does meet the test of the Wisconsin Idea.

Two years ago we changed the name of our annual conference from the Wisconsin Housing Conference to the Wisconsin Real Estate and Economic Outlook Conference, to recognize the deep connections among housing, other kinds of real estate, and the economy in general.

Over the next few years, as Morris Davis provides the academic leadership for the Graaskamp Center and Mike Brennan leads our connection to the industry, I'll be spending part of my time to strengthen the focus of the Graaskamp Center on economic development.

Details will follow in the months ahead. Today I want to simply bring this effort, and indeed this conference, back to the touchstone of "sifting and winnowing" that is part of our inheritance from our intellectual and institutional forbearers, beginning with Richard Ely. Most of you have heard the phrase, and many of you have seen the plaque atop Bascom Hill, from a century ago:

Whatever may be the limitations which trammel inquiry elsewhere, we believe that the Great State University of Wisconsin should ever encourage that continual and fearless sifting and winnowing by which alone the truth can be found. Taken from a report of the Board of Regents. 1894 [slide of the plaque projected]

As many of you know, this quotation, famous on campus and off, came out of a fierce debate about (of all things) unionization, in 1894. In brief, Ely supported unionization, and some of the Regents did not. They never, to my knowledge, reached agreement on the specific issue, but they did, in the end, establish a firm principle that at Wisconsin, people had a right to speak on different sides of important issues; a right to be heard; and that we owe those with whom we disagree, as well as those with whom we agree, a duty to listen.

To be clear, "sifting and winnowing," doesn't mean that every idea is equal; but rather that ideas should be heard, and examined on their merits, rigorously, rather than reflexively. As Daniel Moynihan famously put it some years ago, everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but not their own facts. Sifting and winnowing helps us establish the facts, and helps us form opinions that are grounded in those facts as well as our values.

Now, in light of the principle of sifting and winnowing, today we aim to have some constructive conversations about housing, real estate, and our state's economic development.

I'm a professor, and I do research on these subjects. But economic development is not simply an abstraction, or merely an academic subject. It touches all of our lives, and our children's lives. Economic development is not just about economics, not just how much stuff we can produce or buy. It's also about how well housed we are, whether we're educated to reach our full potential, how well we attend to our health. It even touches on our basic security, and at the national and global level, questions of war and peace.

The key to understanding economic development is to start by understanding there is no key to economic development. There is no silver bullet. Economic development is complicated.

Unfortunately we live in a world where simple solutions get the headlines. All too often, we talk past each other, cherry picking research and arguments that support our preconceived notions, and ignoring research that challenges our preconceptions. Psychologists call this confirmation bias, and it's a very powerful part of human nature. We're all subject to it. We have to fight it, every day. The best way to fight confirmation bias is to hold to rigorous standards of evidence, and hold your own opinions to the same standard to which you hold others.

For example, if you're a Republican, or a fiscal conservative of whatever persuasion, you might think state tax cuts are a silver bullet. It's important that you know about the substantial body of research that tells us simple tax differences between states explain virtually none of the variation in state economic performance.

To pick another example, if you're a Democrat, or someone who worries about providing enough resources to schools, you might think that more dollars to our schools, perhaps for smaller class sizes, are a silver bullet. It's important that you know that of a number of careful studies done on this issue, so far I've only found one that finds statistically significant relationships between class size and performance, and that only in a few grades. Most careful studies are unable to find a simple relationship.

I can list another dozen silver bullets that aren't really silver. School vouchers, charter schools, passenger rail, spending on roads, less regulation of business, more regulation of business.

It gets even more complicated here. None of these is a silver bullet. None, by itself, are magic beans that take us up the stalk to Economic Development Nirvana. Yet each of these ideas contains some germ of truth, or at least can help us think harder and better about what kinds of things are likely to work, and in what combination. Tax cuts can help if we find ways to preserve essential services while reducing taxes. As a society, we haven't had that conversation yet. Some charter schools, and some public schools, do work as advertised; we need to make sure we figure out why, and replicate and encourage them. As a society, we haven't had that conversation yet. It's not about how much regulation we have so much as what kind of regulation, how we make regulations and taxes and other government interventions smarter. As a society, we haven't had that conversation yet.

Recognizing that some of the best ideas will come from people with whom you disagree, is an important step towards making these true conversations, productive conversations. We need, as Ely and the 1894 Board of Regents taught us, to sift and winnow. Fight your confirmation bias; help me see mine, but in a constructive way. Don't paint yourself, or others, into corners. Determine the facts, and what works, without regard to ideology; and then act on it.

This is why we are here today. Join us in a day of sifting, of winnowing, of learning. Let's move these conversations forward today. Listen, as well as talk. Do recognize that, if we're honest and careful about it, sometimes we'll initially be uncomfortable with what we find. Challenge yourself as well as others. Let's move the conversation ahead, not only today, but over succeeding weeks and months and years. Let's get Wisconsin's economy, and our people, moving FORWARD.

On Wisconsin!

Postscript: Several conference participants and colleagues have asked for more details on Malpezzi's claims that research rarely supports "silver bullet" approaches to economic development. In the next several weeks we'll post some details and references, and seek comments and further conversation.

The Progressive online has begun the conversation, with a commentary on Malpezzi's introductory remarks, and his own brief reply, at Progressive.org.

More "sifting and winnowing" to come!

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Register before June 1st

Tomorrow is the registration deadline for the 2011 Wisconsin Real Estate and Economic Outlook Conference.

The theme for 2011 is: New Partnerships: Government and Real Estate
When: Thursday June 9, 2011
Fluno Center for Executive Education, Madison, WI

With an exciting roster of panelists and keynote speakers including Governor Scott Walker, U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan, and UW Foundation President Michael Knetter plus Patricia McCoy from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, a capacity crowd is expected. Reserve your spot now, click here to register.

Panel discussions will address:
The New Regulatory Realities: What Can You Expect?
The Budget and Financial Reforms: What's on the Horizon?
Financial Reforms and Affordable Housing: What Works

For the full agenda, visit the conference website.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

New partnerships at the Wisconsin Real Estate and Economic Outlook Conference

Wisconsin Real Estate and Economic Outlook Conference:
New Partnerships: Government and Real Estate

Thursday June 9, 2011
Fluno Center for Executive Education, Madison, WI
Register today!

In the wake of one of the worst financial crises in recent history, the Federal government has revamped the U.S. regulatory architecture responsible for safeguarding the financial system. Perhaps the most influential, and controversial, of these reforms is the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010. Some believe that the new laws and regulations will curtail risk-taking necessary for innovation and growth, while others believe that the new laws change the incentives that encouraged banks and other financial-market participants deemed too-big-to- fail to take excessive and socially undesirable risks.

What we know for sure right now is that it will take some time for businesses to fully assess how they will be affected by the new laws and rules. How will the new Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection affect how real estate and finance professionals do transactions? How will new rules support buyers and sellers, lenders and borrowers? How will the proposed replacement of Fannie and Freddie affect the cost of and access to mortgage credit, and what might the secondary mortgage market of the future look like?

At the 2011 Wisconsin Real Estate and Economic Outlook Conference, we will explore how the new regulatory landscape will affect the size and scope of activity in the real estate and financial services industries. The conference will include thoughts and analysis from experts from the public and private sectors, from government, business, and academia, all of whom are on the front lines of housing market research, policy, and practice. Join this important conversation about the current state of the national housing market and how financial reform efforts will affect the real estate and financial services industries.

Keynote Speakers

Elizabeth Warren, Assistant to the President and Special Advisor to the Secretary of the Treasury on the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (invited)
Scott Walker, Governor of Wisconsin (invited)
Michael Knetter, President and Chief Executive Officer of the University of Wisconsin Foundation and former dean of the Wisconsin School of Business

Panel Topics

  • New Regulatory Realities: What Can You Expect?
  • Budget and Financial Reforms: What's on the Horizon?
  • Financial Reforms and Affordable Housing: What Works

Click here for the full agenda and to register.

The conference is brought to you by:
James A. Graaskamp Center for Real Estate
Wisconsin Housing and Economic Development Authority
Wisconsin Department of Commerce
Wisconsin Realtors Association
Wisconsin Bankers Association

Corporate sponsorship opportunities are available. Contact Lee Gottschalk at lgottschalk at bus.wisc.edu for more information on how your company can reach a wide variety of professionals and policy makers and support critical housing and community development issues.


Tuesday, April 19, 2011

The state of the housing market

"There are signs that the two-year drop in Wisconsin home prices had bottomed out, at least in some regions of the state."

That was one of the takeaways from yesterday's Newsmakers interview on the WisconsinEye Network with Stephen Malpezzi, professor with Wisconsin's Real Estate Program and recognized expert on housing and urban development, and Bill Malkasian, president of the Wisconsin Realtors Association. They also discussed current housing inventory and the advantages offered by continued low interest rates to potential home buyers. Visit WisEye.org to watch video of the interview.

Malpezzi also joined a panel last Thursday on KUOW Puget Sound Public Radio to discuss the role of government in the housing market. He, along with European real estate expert Dr. Joaquin Jorge Piserra Ribera and Vancouver Sun Editor Fiona Anderson, tackled questions including: Should the United States change the way it finances real estate? How do other countries do it? Would changing the government's role in the housing market affect the way we think about houses? Visit KUOW.org to listen to audio of the broadcast.

The housing market and the regional economic outlook will be central topics at the Graaskamp Center's annual June conference.

The 2011 Wisconsin Real Estate and Economic Outlook Conference on June 9th in Madison will feature keynote presentations from Elizabeth Warren, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and Governor Scott Walker.

This conference will explore how the new regulatory landscape will affect the size and scope of activity in the real estate and financial services industries. How will the new Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection affect how real estate and finance professionals do transactions? How will new rules support buyers and sellers, lenders and borrowers? How will the proposed replacement of Fannie and Freddie affect the cost of and access to mortgage credit, and what might the secondary mortgage market of the future look like? Join this important conversation. Click to view the agenda and to register.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Real Estate Research Spans Our Campus

by Stephen Malpezzi, Professor and Lorin and Marjorie Tiefenthaler Distinguished Chair in Real Estate

One of the defining characteristics of the University of Wisconsin is the breadth of scholarship and teaching across the campus. For example, we teach more foreign languages (more than 80!) than any other university in the world. In previous posts, we talked about the new Discovery Institutes, a public-private partnership that brings together researchers from across campus to work on a range of problems such as epigenetics (how genes are activated or inactivated), tissue engineering (using artificial structures called “scaffolds” to grow cells into substitutes for biological material – maybe that piece of my knee I lost in a long-ago basketball game), improvements in therapeutic technologies, the application of recent advances in the mathematics of optimization to biology and medicine, and a broad look at the “systems level” of biological organisms.

The Graaskamp Center and its associated faculty are in the thick of intellectual ferment in our field, both inside and outside the University. Within UW, our faculty have their academic homes in the Wisconsin School of Business, but our faculty also have formal affiliations with other UW organizations, including Economics, Urban and Regional Planning, the Institute for Research on Poverty, World Affairs and the Global Economy (WAGE), and the Law School, to name a few. In turn, selected faculty from these and other units serve as Faculty Fellows of the Graaskamp Center. Among their many contributions, these colleagues often speak at our events such as the twice-annual meetings of our Board of Advisors and the Wisconsin Real Estate and Economic Outlook Conference.

We’re very fortunate that we can also leverage off each other’s research. Some years ago, Richard Green (then on our faculty) and Michelle White wrote an influential paper “Measuring the Benefits of Homeownership: Effects on Children,” that kicked off a renewed interest among housing economists in the connections between housing markets and social outcomes. More recently, housing economists in the Graaskamp Center have been focused on the connections between unemployment and the economic well-being of families, and our recent problems in the housing market, for example the development of the Wisconsin Foreclosure and Unemployment Relief Plan (WI-FUR).

Thus, we’re very pleased to see a new Wisconsin research initiative on the connections between housing and the long-term health and well-being of children, families and communities from our colleagues at the Institute for Research on Poverty:

FOUNDATION FUNDS HOUSING RESEARCH OF THREE UW-MADISON FACULTY MEMBERS

Three researchers with the Institute for Research on Poverty at the University of Wisconsin-Madison Timothy Smeeding, Lawrence Berger and J. Michael Collins, have received support from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation to explore the role housing plays in the long-term health and well-being of children, families and communities.

Their main thesis is that income benefit policies are also housing stability policies that help families maintain payments for mortgages and rent and therefore avoid forced housing changes. The goal of their research is to identify the most effective policies for avoiding the negative impacts of housing changes on family well-being.

We’re looking forward to learning from this research as it comes online. Read the full press release from UW-Madison News.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

WBA 2011 Economic Forecast: Business Fundamentals

Recently the Wisconsin Bankers Association organized its 2011 Economic Forecast Luncheon (listen to audio), held at Madison’s Monona Terrace. Graaskamp Center Academic Director Stephen Malpezzi attended as the guest of our friend Kurt Bauer, WBA president and CEO. (Kurt and his colleagues are also sponsors of our annual Wisconsin Real Estate and Economic Outlook conference, along with the Wisconsin REALTORS Association, WHEDA, and the Wisconsin Department of Commerce; mark your calendars now for June 9, 2011.)

The conference was opened with brief remarks by Jeff Mayers, WisPolitics.com and WisBusiness.com. The main program comprised a speech by Wisconsin’s new governor Scott Walker, and a keynote address by the president of the Federal Reserve Board of Minneapolis Narayana Kocherlakota.

The theme of Governor Walker’s remarks was “Wisconsin is open for business.” He outlined a series of planned initiatives in taxation, incentives, and regulatory relief, as well as a reorganization of the Wisconsin Department of Commerce. The governor’s call for subjecting regulations to a cost-benefit analysis is consistent with a long strand of research at the University of Wisconsin, from James Graaskamp’s analysis of the proper role of the “infrastructure producer’s group” (aka “government”) in his classic ULI monograph “Fundamentals of Real Estate Development” to Malpezzi's research on land use and development regulations ["House Prices, Externalities and Regulation in U.S. Metropolitan Areas." Journal of Housing Research. 1996], rent controls, and their public interventions. A Wisconsin economics PhD, Timothy Bartik, has written one of the deepest and richest analyses of these interventions “Who Benefits from State and Local Development Policies?” (a Reading for Life “Top Twelve”!).

Dr. Kocherlakota’s talk was framed by one of our favorite real estate movies: It’s a Wonderful Life. But instead of asking how Bedford Falls would have fared without George Bailey and his eponymous Building & Loan, Kocherlakota asked how the economy would have fared over the past three years without the extraordinary actions taken by the Federal Reserve, and are continuing in “QE2” (Quantitative Easing II).

Kocherlakota pointed to the key role played by volatility in land and real estate markets in the economic events of the past decade. He didn’t provide references in his talk but, in his academic papers on the subject (and in post-speech conversations), he cites our own Morris Davis as his source on land price data and analysis.

We have a lot of evidence—back through the 80s—that volatility in housing/land prices is driven in part (but in important ways) by the things that affect the supply of real estate product—regulatory constraint and natural geography. See Malpezzi's paper with Susan Wachter, The Role of Speculation in Real Estate Cycles, for example.

The role asset prices, especially housing, play in the recent economic and financial crisis has reopened the question of whether central banks should continue to make policy based primarily on prices as measured by the Consumer Price Index and similar price measures; or whether they should also consider the prices of assets, like housing and stocks. In response to a question from Malpezzi during Q&A, Kocherlakota said that the Fed should not use asset prices to fix monetary policy. Instead asset prices should be an element in designing regulatory oversight of financial institutions.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Speaking the facts at the Wisconsin Real Estate and Economic Outlook Conference June 4th

Our annual conference on Wisconsin real estate and the economy is coming up on Friday June 4th. The theme is "Navigating the Credit Crunch: What's Ahead for Wisconsin?"--a must for housing and real estate professionals, government and non-profit professionals, builders and developers, housing finance professionals and anyone interested in community development. You can review the agenda and register online at our website at bus.wisc.edu/whc2010.

Today we talked with Associate Professor Morris Davis, former Federal Reserve economist now at now UW-Madison real estate and urban land economics, about the conference keynote speaker David Altig, director of research at the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta.

"David is a great economist, highly regarded as one of the best economists in the Fed.

He will likely talk about what the recovery will look like, how quickly the Fed will tighten monetary policy (the so-called "exit strategy") and about what's going on in Europe.

He and his colleagues write a great blog: Macroblog, which if you aren't already reading, you should. David speaks the facts as best we know them and communicates them without a lot of "gobbledygook."

He'll tell people the way things are, the way he sees it. He's a really good guy!"

Don't miss David and the rest of the amazing lineup of speakers at this year's conference. Register by Thursday May 27th at www.bus.wisc.edu/whc2010.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Wisconsin's real estate and economic outlook

Registration is well underway for our annual real estate conference on June 4th in Madison. The theme this year is "Navigating the Credit Crunch: What's Ahead for Wisconsin?" Today we talked with the Graaskamp Center's Academic Director Stephen Malpezzi on the highlights of the event:

"It's been clear for some time that the slow economy has been driven by first the housing market and now commercial real estate markets. If you're concerned about the economic outlook, this conference is the place to be.

We have speakers who are not only experts on the connection between housing and the real estate markets but macroeconomic thought leaders as well--our keynote speaker David Altig from the Atlanta Fed and Matt Feldman with the Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago.

We have top academics and people who are deep experts in practice, like Scott Fecteau at Associated Bank and Tim Hanna, longtime mayor of Appleton who is active on the state scene with new ideas on how state and local governments can connect more productively. Politics and economics are more connected than ever (see TARP, TALF, etc.). We're very excited to have Ken Goldstein to talk about how the political landscape effects housing and the economy.

We have the state's leading expert outside government on Wisconsin's fiscal situation Todd Barry (Wisconsin Taxpayers Alliance), and we have five leading economists, including Michael Knetter, dean of the Wisconsin School of Business, on a single panel in a unique rapid-fire Q&A.

If you want to be part of the dialogue on real estate and the economy, you should attend this conference."

See the full agenda and register by Thursday May 27th at www.bus.wisc.edu/whc2010.

Thursday, January 7, 2010

2010 Wisconsin housing conference set for June 4th

Mark your calendars for June 4, 2010 for the Wisconsin housing conference.

The conference is organized by the James A. Graaskamp Center for Real Estate, the Wisconsin Housing and Economic Development Authority (WHEDA), the State of Wisconsin Department of Commerce Division of Housing & Community Development, and the Wisconsin Realtors Association.

The annual conference features a range of experts - from the public and private sectors, from government and business and from academia - who are on the front lines of housing market research, policy and practice. Last year's meeting looked ahead from crisis to recovery. This year's event promises to be particularly engaging as the outlook unfolds and extends into the future.

Stay tuned for more announcements on the program agenda and registration information. If you are interested in sponsoring the conference, please contact Lee Gottschalk at lgottschalk@bus.wisc.edu.