11 - Derbes - Economic Life Concepts
11 - Derbes - Economic Life Concepts
11 - Derbes - Economic Life Concepts
INTRODUCTION
The late David Montana, MAI, said that anyone who understood time would
make a good appraiser. The concept of time in the valuation art is more
difficult to comprehend than most appraisers realize. Time is now; it is a
moment in the past; and it is a moment in the future. Time is a span of
moments.
An appraisal is like a photograph. At a given instant of time, what is in
front of the camera when the shutter is triggered and the flashbulb explodes is
what the film captures. In an appraisal, the present worth of future ben -fit is
in the minds of the players in the market at the time of valuation. What takes
place later cannot be accounted for when taking the value "photograph."
Appraisals are usually dated. Technically, however, an appraisal is
made at a certain time of day on a specific date. Because the date of the
valuation has passed when the report is delivered, the appraiser is typically
not concerned about the time of day at which the valuation was made. It is
possible, though, that an appraisal could be made in the morning, and the
improvements burn to the ground in the afternoon or evening the same day.
Most real estate appraisals deal with periods of time, often relative
periods of physical and economic usefulness in terms of the market. The
Max J. Derbes, Jr., MAI , is president of Max J. Derbes, Inc.. a real estate appraisal, industrial brokerage,
and consulting firm in the New Orleans area. He Is a contributor to the 4th edition ot Industrial Real Estate and
his articles appear in numerous real estate publications. Mr. Derbes has been teaching the Institute's
Industrial Valuation Course since 1967.
216
concept of time is critical and often misunderstood in the analysis of all three
approaches sales comparison, income capitalization, and cost.
ECONOMIC LIFE
Economic life is defined as "the period over which improvements to real
property contribute to property value." 1 Remaining economic life is "the
estimated period over which improvements will continue to contribute to
property value."2 Effective age is "the age indicated by the condition and
utility of a structure."3 These are difficult concepts that can easily be misap
plied in measuring accrued depreciation in the cost approach.
The concept of economic life was created in simpler times to explain
buyer attitudes toward capital recapture. Later it was used to explain age-life
concepts of accrued depreciation, which were tied together in concept, but
differed in usage.
A number of decades back, prior to "Pete" Ellwood's theories of capital j
recapture in relative short holding periods, there were theories of the return i
on and of an investment. An investor was said to require an interest return,
plus the money invested in the improvements returned over a given period.
The interest return on the investment might be 5%, 6%, or more. The return
of the investment was conveniently over 20, 25, 33'A, 40, or 50 years to
correspond with 5%, 4%, 3%, 2.5%, or 2% per annum recapture under
straight-line depreciation theories.
Time concepts of future economic life were incorporated in the Internal
Revenue Code decades ago. The deduction of depreciation allowed for i
business and real estate investors varied, depending on whether the asset was
real or personal property, such as machinery and equipment. Various classes
of real and personal property were allowed varying years of recapture, with
short-life items tied somewhat into their probable physical life.
With the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 the term depreciation was
changed to capital recapture. This provision gave all tangible assets much
shorter lives, to encourage investments in real estate, industrial plants, and
equipment. These recapture periods were subsequently lengthened. None- -f
theless, both the prior and the 1980 codes expressed depreciation in terms of
years. If a property had a 15-year life, the per annum deduction allowed was
6.67%; an 18-year life, 5.56%; a 31.5-year life, 3.1746%'. The interrelation
ship of years and the percentage of capital recapture allowed per annum on a i
straight-line basis is elementary.
In valuation, the total economic life at the time of appraisal depends on '
the quality of construction, the stability of the location, the age of the
1. American Inst. of Real Estate Appraisers, The Dictionary of Real EsUUe Appraisal (Chicago: Amer
ican Inst. of Real Estate Appraisers, 1984). 103.
2. Ibid.. 255.
3. Ibid., 104. |
i i
I Derbes: Economic Life Concepts 217
property improvements, and local market conditions. A small commercial
building in a city with an abundance of capital might have an economic life of
40 years, whereas in a Midwest city with fewer capital resources, it might
have an economic life of 33 Vi years.
The life of a property is a function of the age of the improvements. A
newly constructed investment property is considered to have a longer eco
nomic life than an older one. A new apartment complex would have an
expected economic life of 40 years, while the same property 15 years later
might have an economic life of only 33 l/3 years. In this example, the actual or
chronological age of the property was 15 years, but the remaining economic
life was reduced by only 62/i years between the new and the 15-year-old
project. Actual age and the effective economic life used for older improve
ments do not go hand in hand.
The basic assumption underlying the return of the investment in im
provements is that improvements wear out or become economically obso
lete. In the real estate economy prior to World War II, there was probably
more justification for the "throw-away economy" syndrome than currently
exists. Renovation, including remodeling, restoration, and modernization,
conforms to our current preservationist attitudes and tax incentives. These
measures extend the useful life of properties, particularly through their
effects on the shell of a building.
OVERALL AGE-LIFE DEPRECIATION
Eventually the economic life concept became part of the process of measur
ing accrued depreciation. An improvement that is 15 years old, but with an
overall age-life depreciation of only 25%, might be rated on the basis of an
effective age of 10/40, with 30 years remaining economic life. This means that
the effective age is only 10 years rather than the actual age of 15 years, and
that the total accrued depreciation is 25%, not 15/40, or 37.5%.
This analysis might be better understood if we use a slightly more precise
definition of effective age, such as effective age is equivalent to the chrono
logical age of typical properties having the same utility and in the same
condition as the subject. This links effective age to the market, and makes it
clear that effective age will reflect the current level of maintenance related to
typical practices and any changes in the state of the art. Such a definition
emphasizes the dual aspect of forces that influence effective age-physical
deterioration, and obsolescence.
For example, in much of the country in the early 1950s, major oil
companies adopted a standard two-bay service station with office, rest-
rooms, and a small utility room, built out of concrete blocks and faced with
porcelainized metal panels. This facility was placed on a lot approximately
125 feet by 100 feet with pumps within a few inches of the same location on
each site. For 10 to 12 years, virtually all new units were constructed from the
TABLE 1
Physical Deterioration Based on Overall Economic Age-Life
Short-life items:
Roof 15/25x $6,400 = $3,840
A/C compressor 7/1 Ox $1,800 = $1,260
Heating unit 15/30x $2.400 = $1,200
Electrical 15/30x $1,600 = $800
Decoration 3/5 x $600 = $360
Plumbing 15/25x $2,100 = $1,260
Flooring 15/15x $1.280 = $1,280'
$16,180
$16,180 x, 62 = $10,000
Long-life items:
$100,000
-30.955
Value indicated = $69,045
TABLE 2
Many buildings will last 100 or even 200 years if maintained properly.
There are buildings in some of America's older cities that are 100 or 150 years
old, which are still functional and usable. Many of these older properties