No Longer Nomads:

 The History Of Real Estate

Post: Dec 9, 2009

By Andrew Beattie

 

For almost half of human history, our ancestors moved with the four-legged food  supplies of their respective areas, leaving only trace signs of their lives - a  cave painting here, some stone axes there and the odd carved trinket in the  belly of a saber-toothed tiger.
Our ancestors abandoned the  hunter-gatherer lifestyle gradually over the period from 30,000 B.C. to 15,000  B.C. This change was far from global, and hunter-gatherer societies still  survive in some areas of the world today, but it did mark a transition toward an  agrarian society - a transition that also heralded the advent of home ownership.  In this article, we will look at the original investment,  the birth of homeownership and real estate. (To read more about real estate, see Investing  In Real Estate, Smart  Real Estate Transactions and our Exploring  Real Estate Investments tutorial.)
Staking  Claim Many agrarian systems progressed like this: fertile plains  were staked out and settled in a might-makes-right manner in  which those who could defend the land were those who kept it. Eventually, a  system of tribal leaders  developed, and those who had the approval of the tribe would disperse lands,  settle disputes and require a payment from all his subjects. The shift toward  more and more powerful tribal leaders culminated in a pooling of labor along  with a CEO of  sorts to direct efforts. Irrigation channels were dug, strongholds were built,  farming methods improved and temples were erected. With the land improvement, populations  exploded. Now, where a family of hunter-gatherers might be able to support  one or two children at best, farmers could produce several children. The  increased fertility also meant increased available laborers.
The  Original Protection Racket Hunter-gatherers also followed a tribal  system, but scarcity and the uncertainty of the life meant that a tribe could  only support two or three extended families. The amorous farmers, however, soon  found that they could not name everyone in their tribe anymore. In return for  the sacrifice of familiarity, people living in these small societies gained the  safety of numbers. A well-fed army easily repelled any desperate raiders. In  return for this security, the people all paid homage to the lord or king who  claimed ownership of the land - which, in essence was the first system of rent.  As these farming villages grew into cities, the leading families maintained  ownership by right of lineage - their ancestors had clubbed all other  challengers senseless - thus becoming the kings, pharaohs, daimyos and the heads  of other feudal dynasties. (To find out more about renting, see Are  You Ready to Rent?, To  Rent or Buy? - Part 1 and Part  2.)
All Hail the King This system of  labor-for-protection developed into two separate systems in most countries: taxes and  tenancy. Royal families spread their wealth to friends, signing away titles  and deeds to lands  that allowed the holders to collect the revenues (rent) produced by the peasants  living there. On top of this rent, all the people within a ruler's  realm were generally required to pay a tax. Many other demands were made by  ruling leader,  such as military service, and they were grudgingly met because these rulers  owned the land not only by birthright, but by military might as  well. Rulers could be overthrown by other rulers, and sometimes by  peasants, but a new ruler would sit on the throne and the average peasant  would rarely notice a difference.
It wasn't all bad news for the  peasants, however. They were able to trade with other kingdoms and the general  level of wealth increased, giving rise to a merchant class as well as  specialized laborers - the tradesmen - who were able to earn a living with their  skills and not by their crops. This, in turn, resulted in non-agrarian shops and  houses that still paid rent and taxes to the various lords and kings, but were  bought, sold and rented among the common folk rather than by the royal class.  Richer merchants became the first common-born landlords  and gained wealth and status. These merchants didn't own the land, but they  owned the houses on it.
The King is Dead Many  aristocracies were eventually displaced - usually by displacing an  aristocrat's head from the body - with supposed  meritocracies - a  system where the best and brightest lead a nation for the good of all. What  happened instead was the creation of politics. Title lands were broken into  smaller parcels and sold on a free market of sorts, but the people with the  money to buy the deeds were either merchants or former aristocrats who managed  to escape being shortened by revolutionary fervor. Peasants had yet to make much  progress from the original farming-tribesmen 30,000 years before  them.
The Age of Machines The industrial revolution  was one of the great equalizers in human history, perhaps only matched by the  invention of firearms. The effects of industry, much like a gun, were neither  positive nor negative, but depended on application. The use of machines for  manual labor freed many peasants for different tasks, and allowed a privileged  few time for education and specialization into new fields of labor opened up by  the mechanization of industry. Cobblers, seamstresses and cabinetmakers found  that their once invaluable skills were now obsolete, leaving them to return to  the land and the coal mines beneath it to try to eke out a living.
People  with ambition were able to jump classes and bring some of their low class  sensibilities with them, leading to track housing for laborers and a range of  products aimed at the lower classes. The people who made up the classification  of peasants now became middle class, blue  collar, white  collar, and a handful of other things. They owned houses, cars, and  eventually, radios and televisions, which suggested what other things they might  want to own. (To find out more about these current-day distinctions, see Losing The Middle  Class, Surveying The  Employment Report and Invest  In Yourself With A College Education.)
Magic  Mortgages The invention of mortgages  belongs to no particular country. Mortgages existed for a long time as an  exclusive loan given only to nobility. After the industrial revolution, however,  the wealth of the world increased to the point where banks opened themselves to  "higher-risk" mortgage loans to common people. This allowed individuals to own  their own homes and, if they so desired, to become landlords themselves. It took  30,000 years, but home ownership is now open to many people. In fact, it has  reached the point where people often buy too much or take out too much of a  mortgage. (To learn more about buying a house, see our Mortgage  Basics tutorial.)
The freedom to own something can be a  heady brew, so it is important to practice moderation. Consuming too much debt  by way of a mortgage can help you lose a house as likely as it will help you own  one. (When people take on too much debt, the market can fall due to loan  defaults. For a one-stop shop on subprime mortgages and the subprime meltdown,  check out our Subprime  Mortgages Feature.)
Conclusion Ownership,  specifically ownership of land, was the basis of all the investment  opportunities we see today. Without a stable population and a set location,  trade and commerce between groups is limited. Ownership has moved from being  established by strength to being something you can buy, sell, trade and rent.  There has always been a tradeoff for tenancy - a fee paid to the "owner"  for the land and its protection.  This responsibility was first afforded to tribal leaders, then to kings and  finally to landlords. Now we have the power to own our homes, a move that has  changed the way people live.
Read more: http://www.investopedia.com/articles/07/history-real-estate.asp#ixzz1WjRGK0PR