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Everyone's Money Book on Real Estate 

By Jordan Goodman

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The prospect of finding, financing, and maintaining a home can be fraught with complexities. But in the end, home ownership can provide several major benefits, including tax breaks, appreciation potential, and the pride of controlling the place you call home. The idea of paying off a mortgage by retirement age, forever eliminating monthly mortgage payments, is a goal for many Americans. 

In contrast, renters often feel as if they throw their money away each month because they are unable to build any equity in the place they live. Once they retire, their rent continues unabated.

Perhaps, for that and many other reasons, two-thirds of Americans now own their own homes. However, making the decision to buy real estate for personal shelter or investment can have a dark side: a home can become a huge liability, sapping your finances and burdening you with debt and obligations that ruin your lifestyle. 

That is why it’s so important to understand how different real estate investments work.

With a better understanding of the different types of real estate investments, you can determine what is best for you. 

This book will guide you through two processes: choosing and financing your own home, and investing in real estate for financial security and gain

Throughout the 1970s and early 1980s, real estate was the sure-fire way to accumulate wealth. The combination of a housing shortage, a surging number of baby boomers entering the real estate market, generous tax advantages, and high inflation expectations resulted in startling gains in home prices. 

The bubble burst in the mid-1980s and continued into the 1990s, however, as most housing markets became overbuilt, fewer boomers could afford homes, tax breaks were curtailed, and inflation plunged. 

By the end of the 1990s and into 2000, real estate prices again shot up, only to soften with the economic slowdown of the early 2000s. 

Despite low interest rates and nearly nonexistent inflation, this watershed event sent most segments of the economy into an even more pronounced tailspin. 

The real estate landscape is, therefore, much more treacherous now, particularly if you purchase a home as an investment rather than a comfortable place in which to live. 

Many people who bought homes at inflated prices now feel burdened by huge mortgage payments on property that has fallen sharply in value. These homeowners often rationalize their purchase by saying, "We couldn’t stand not earning any mortgage interest deductions to lower our taxes" or "We had to buy before prices got out of reach." In retrospect, these buyers’ financial situations might have been improved if they had rented for less than their current monthly mortgage payment, owed a bit more in taxes, and invested the difference between their rent and their mortgage payment in the surging stock and bond markets. 

The economic boom of the late 1990s and early 2000s brought some relief to these homeowners in areas of the country where housing prices recovered substantially, encouraging real estate investors to jump on and take a ride on another real estate boom bandwagon. 

The makeup of American households has changed substantially over the past few decades. According to Rutgers University’s National Marriage Project, the majority of Americans don’t have a child at home. 

Today, only about one-third of U.S. households contain children. In addition to this, fewer couples are marrying, and more than half of those who do wed for the first time are living together before tying the knot.

Single motherhood is also a growing segment that was once considered an exception to the rule a generation ago. Because of demographic changes such as these, housing needs are changing as well, with far more singles and single parents buying homes than ever before. 

Baby boomers, the postwar generation that makes up a huge segment of the population, is now another force changing the landscape and buying habits of America.

As the leading edge of this generation gets used to the proverbial empty nest and begins to think about what is now called active retirement, housing options become even more diverse. 

Whichever demographic niche you occupy, it’s important to understand where your investment dollar may stretch farthest. 

This book will guide you through the two important processes of choosing and financing your own home, and investing in real estate

Jordan E. Goodman 

Excerpted from Everyone's Money Book on Real Estate by Jordan Elliot Goodman
Copyright © 2003. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

About the Author: Jordan E. Goodman is a weekly contributor to Public Radio International’s The Marketplace Morning Report and appears frequently as a personal finance commentator on NBC, MSNBC, CNN, CNBC, and Fox television. 

He also is a frequent guest on radio call-in shows around the country. On the editorial staff of Money magazine for 18 years, where he served as Wall Street correspondent, Goodman was also a weekly financial analyst on NBC News at Sunrise for 9 years and a daily financial commentator on the Mutual Broadcasting Network for 8 years. 

His frequent speeches, workshops, and media guest appearances around the country keep him in touch with consumers’ and investors’ financial interests. He is the author of Everyone's Money Book, now in its third edition, as well as the coauthor of Barron’s Dictionary of Finance and Investment Terms and Barron’s Finance and Investment Handbook

Goodman is the creator of a multimedia personal finance education package, The Money Answers Program, and publishes a weekly newsletter, Money Answers Now



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