The Pandemic Home-Building Boom Is Over
Builders are starting fewer new housing projects but housing construction rates remain steady. Experts say it's a product of inflation catching up with persistent supply chain problems.

New U.S. home construction is plunging after a brief pandemic boom, showing the strain of continued supply chain woes mixed with persistently high inflation.
Data released Tuesday by the U.S. Census Bureau and U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development show that 1,446,000 new homes started construction in July, a 9.6 percent fall from June and an 8 percent fall from July last year.
This is the latest bit of bad news to come out of the industry, adding to the growing pessimism in the homebuilding sector.
"A housing recession is underway with builder sentiment falling for eight consecutive months while the pace of single-family home building has declined for the last five months," said National Association of Home Builders Chief Economist Robert Dietz in a press release. He did note that multifamily construction, while down in July, was still up nearly 20 percent from 2021.
The talk of a housing recession was echoed by credit reporting agency Finch, which said the likelihood of a "severe downturn" in the housing sector featuring price declines of 10 to 15 percent had increased. They still predict a more moderate, rather than severe, downturn in both prices and homebuilding is most likely.
Some analysts are pointing to buyers being discouraged by record high prices and the rising interest rates that have come with Federal Reserve belt-tightening as the reason for the slowdown.
"Prospective home buyers have gotten to the place that they are either intentionally stepping out of the housing market as they wait and see what happens next or are forced out of the housing market given the higher costs of homeownership," Ali Wolf, chief economist at real estate company Zonda, told The Washington Post.
As of May, home prices had grown 20 percent this year, as measured by the Case-Shiller Home Price Index. Housing affordability—measured as a ratio of housing costs to income—is at its worst since the 1980s.
Kevin Erdmann, a senior affiliated scholar at George Mason University's Mercatus Center, cautions against reading the fall in housing starts as a sign of a housing recession or more general economic contraction. Rather, he says it's a product of temporarily inflated housing starts falling to reflect the actual capacity of builders to construct new housing.
During the pandemic, housing starts rose at a much faster rate than housing completions. Erdmann chalks this up to a mix of elevated demand for new homes colliding with COVID-caused supply chain problems limiting the ability of homebuilders to service that demand. Home prices shot up, and, for a time, so did profit margins on those homes.
"Builders were willing to meet that demand by raising prices but taking some of the extra margin," says Erdman. Those higher margins meant they'd be willing to start projects they couldn't complete on time.
Those supply chain problems haven't gone away. But persistent inflation is starting to eat into the elevated margins builders were earning, he says.
Indeed, the price of building materials continued to tick up in July, according to the latest Producer Price Index. They've risen 35 percent since 2020, with most of that increase coming after 2021. Labor shortages have also hit construction companies hard.
That all means builders are less willing to take on new projects.
The good news is that housing starts remain above housing completions, and those completions have remained steady throughout the year.
"The slowdown we've seen so far is unwinding that excess," says Erdmann. "It's not necessarily a contraction."
This is still hardly an ideal situation. One would have hoped instead that easing supply chain issues would have seen housing completions rise to meet housing starts. That clearly isn't happening.
It also comes after over a decade of underbuilding in most American cities following the Great Recession. The country is still short an estimated 4 million to 20 million homes.
Addressing long-term affordability issues exacerbated by the pandemic will require building more. Until that happens, says Erdmann, we can expect home prices and rents to stay high.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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Don't believe the Republicans when they say construction is plunging. Construction is experiencing an upward growth inversion.
/Biden's Press Secretary.
ZERO INFLATION IN JULY!
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Doesn't really matter. Code requirements have driven up the price of new housing so much that it will be forever out of reach of anyone who doesn't have a six figure income.
When everyone moves up the housing chain, affordable units get left behind.
You have to keep building the chain.
That is utter bullshit - and almost an explicit admission that this is a Ponzi game.
Almost all brownfield housing development ELIMINATE housing units. eg a 100 unit SRO hotel turns into 25 condos. That's 75 housing units eliinated and almost entirely of lower income and non-nuclear family households.
The greenfield housing development may create housing - but it is two hours away from wherever any could work at that eliminated housing. And it is only for nuclear families. For others, that housing may be affordable but they've lost their job, have to buy/operate a car now. And bluntly since real estate development is entirely a tax boondoggle in the US now, new-build luxury housing is only built to shelter tax on OTHER income (or simply to keep it vacant if the buyer is Chinese and expects the future buyer to be Chinese).
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Not in California. They tear down 5 or 6 single story ranch houses from the 1960s and 70s, and put in 112 condos, complete with 80 parking spaces.
Where? They’re building new homes in my area (only area with growth in Illinois) for $200k to $250k each.
Lol. Probably more like high six figure. Quote on 1500 sq ft ranch in exurban Indiana: 750k without the land...
Joe Friday please tell us what you think about this. We want a builders point of view. I can't imagine why you are not here sharing your wisdom.
I'll share mine. I'm a new construction HVAC estimator in Sacramento area. Shit starting to slow. Still a housing shortage but like other dude said, building codes and state meddling has driven up prices and price many out of the market. We blame the bay area buyers for driving up prices; but how can you not blame them for wanting out of that shithole? I guess it's just progress, but now it's getting harder to afford the monthly payment, let alone the 20% down for new buyers. I might be the last generation to have a paid off house in CA.
Home prices went on a bender thanks to QE and work from home. Now that mortgage rates are returning to market levels, hardly anyone can afford houses at the new rates. Of course fewer houses will be built.
Let's take a quick look at some basic numbers:
Average home cost is over $200K,
Average worker's wage is less $40K,
Average max Loan to value 25%,
Average down payment required 20%,
2% rise in interest rates $115/$100K,
As home sale prices rise, so do "assessed market values" & as such property taxes.
Are we ready for the next foreclosure crisis?