The Volokh Conspiracy
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How Immigration Restrictions Reduce Housing Construction and Exacerbate Shortages
A new study shows deportation of undocumented migrants reduces housing construction by diminishing the supply of workers needed to do it.

The most significant factor inhibiting the construction of new housing in the United States - resulting in severe housing shortages in many areas - is exclusionary zoning. But a new study suggests immigration restrictions contribute to the problem, by reducing the supply of workers. Here's the abstract to the paper by economists Troup Howard, Mengqi Wang, and Dayin Zhang:
US housing markets have faced a secular shortage of housing supply in the past decade, contributing to a steady decline in housing affordability. Most supply-side explanations in the literature have tended to focus on the distortionary effect of local housing regulations. This paper provides novel evidence on a less explored channel affecting housing supply: shortages of construction labor. We exploit the staggered rollout of a national increase in immigration enforcement to identify negative shocks to construction sector employment that are likely unrelated to local housing market conditions. Treated counties experience large and persistent reductions in construction workforce, residential homebuilding, and increases in home prices. Further, evidence suggests that undocumented labor is a complement to domestic labor: deporting undocumented construction workers reduces labor supplied by domestic construction workers on both extensive and intensive margins.
The basic idea here is fairly intuitive Economics 101: immigrants - including undocumented immigrants - are an important part of the construction work force. Reducing the number of available workers increases the price of construction, and thereby reduces output.
More counterintuitive is the finding that reducing the number of undocumented construction workers also reduces employment for native workers. But, as the authors point out, this can occur when native-born and immigrant workers in the industry are complements, rather than substitutes. Previous studies document such effects in other industries, and it can occur in this one, too. The authors' findings are consistent with recent work by noted immigration economist Michael Clemens showing that mass deportation - on net - reduces job opportunities for native workers more than it expands them.
Obviously, as the authors recognize, immigration can also increase demand for housing, thereby increasing prices. Similarly, deporting immigrants (or any other group) can reduce demand, thereby lowering prices. But the authors show this effect is outweighed by the ways in which deportation reduces supply, thereby leading to a net increase in housing prices when more immigrants get deported. This makes intuitive sense: allowing in a group that is disproportionately represented in the housing construction industry can result in sufficient new construction to both meet the extra demand created by that group, and also build additional new housing for others.
None of this proves that immigrant workers never displace native-born ones (or vice versa). Similarly, immigrants can sometimes outbid natives for housing (and, again, vice versa). But, on net, the two groups benefit each other economically far more than the reverse. That appears to be true in the housing sector, as in the economy more generally.
If this seems implausible, consider the impact on white males of allowing more women and minorities to compete on a more equal basis in the labor force in the twentieth century. I summarize this comparison in my last post on the impact of deportation:
One helpful way to think about the issue is to ask whether the twentieth-century expansion of job market opportunities for women and blacks helped white male workers, on net, or harmed them. Some white men likely were net losers. If you were a marginal white Major League Baseball player displaced by Jackie Robinson or other black baseball stars after MLB was integrated, it's possible that you would never find another job you liked as much as that one. But the vast majority of white men were almost certainly net beneficiaries by virtue of the fact that opening up opportunities for women and blacks greatly increased the overall wealth and productivity of society.
If, today, we barred women from the labor force, or restricted them to the kinds of jobs open to them a century ago, some male workers would benefit….
But, overall, men would be much poorer, by virtue of living in a far less productive and innovative society. And many men would lose jobs or suffer decreases in wages because their own productivity depends in part on goods and services produced by women….
Similar consequences would occur if we were to reinstitute racial segregation, thereby severely restricting the job opportunities of black workers. While some whites would come out ahead, most would be net losers, as our economy becomes much less productive.
The key point to remember is that the economy—including the labor market—is not a zero-sum game. Men and women, blacks and whites—and immigrants and natives—can all prosper together, if only the government would let them.
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The immigrants live in their food trucks, so they don’t take up any housing.
Maybe colleges and universities can put them up in dorms emptied by expelled and deported "students"
But, as the authors point out, this can occur when native-born and immigrant workers in the industry are complements, rather than substitutes.
This is an excellent point, and is unlikely to be restricted to housing.
If we suppose that the overall argument is right, on what grounds should we continue to restrict legal immigration?
A country, whether you or Ilya like it or not, has the right to determine who comes in and who does not.
A country, whether you or Ilya like it or not, has the right to determine who comes in and who does not.
Not did I say otherwise. The issue is what arguments people use when making that determination.
I think the real against, even if not the stated ones, are primarily social and not really economic.
There are no virtually no economics that are zero-sum, so to tout that is to state the obvious (despite the prevalence of the fallacy). There are of course trade offs, and low-skill immigration will put downward pressure on wages (particularly with the part of our population that is most marginalized).
Immigration isn't just an economic issue. If we still embraced the assimilation ethic of past eras, I'd be supportive of a more open (but not wide open) policy. We unfortunately don't have the faith in that construct that we once did, for various reasons.
low-skill immigration will put downward pressure on wages
The article implicitly suggests otherwise.
"deporting undocumented construction workers reduces labor supplied by domestic construction workers"
With no discussion of wage effects, that is nonsense. It is a bad attempt to resurrect Say's Law.
"None of this proves that immigrant workers never displace native-born ones (or vice versa)."
Notice the attempt to make it about displacement and not wage suppression. A market is going to 'soak up' the excess labor via reduction in the price of labor.
Even if our government still thought assimilation was desirable, assimilation runs both ways, and the faster the immigration, the more it's the society, and not the newcomers, who end up assimilating.
That's something Somin can't accept: If you dump a huge number of people from dysfunctional societies into a successful society, they bring their dysfunction with them. They don't magically suddenly become members of a functional culture.
Somin treats these people like they were fungible, utterly interchangeable with the native population. He's soaked up the insanity of multiculturalism, the idea that all cultures are equal, rather than some working and some being broken. He treats our functional culture as though it was indestructible, as though it could absorb any number of people with less functional cultural values, and still keep working.
The current flood of illegal immigrants aren't coming from successful societies, they're coming from, as Trump says, hellholes. Does it never occur to Somin that the values of the people who live there are WHY those countries are so awful, and that the illegal immigrants are bringing those values with them?
One might say the same thing about people moving from West Virginia, Idaho, Alabama, or Wyoming to better places.
Much of that movement, however, involves bright flight (the smart, ambitious young people fleeing dysfunctional, bigoted, half-educated backwaters, seeking education, modernity, and opportunity in more successful communities). When an 18-year-old moves from West Virginia to New York to attend Columbia or work in a restaurant, or a 19-year-old moves from Idaho to Philadelphia to attend Penn or work for a technology company, I doubt New York or Pennsylvania is the loser.
I would expect to observe that immigrants moving to downscale American communities are more likely to improve those shambling areas (by bringing entrepreneurship, ambition, character, marketable skills, drive, and/or education) than to intensify the failure.
Xenophobes are obsolete bigots.
"They don’t magically suddenly become members of a functional culture."
I'd say that depends on how they related to their home country culture. If they were misfits in it, such that the U.S. is more harmonious with their own personal values, then the assimilation is probably smoother. If on the other hand, they don't want to drop out of the old culture, and instead drag it with them, that's a different story.
Juris raises a good point/observation regarding the marginalized segment of population.
Hispanics heavily dominate the construction industry. Depending on the region of the country, upwards of 90+% of the labor force is hispanic. The construction industry requires various ranges of skill levels, from very skilled trades to very low skills. Yet relatively few african americans are involved in the construction industry.
If we didn't have immigrants, we wouldn't NEED the extra housing.
That's right. The housing shortage is almost entirely caused by excess immigration. Maybe Pres. Trump will deport all the illegals, and we have enough housing again for Americans.
Actually, while a lot of the housing shortage IS due to illegal immigration, a big component right now is due to the destruction of a lot of housing stock after 2008.
Banks are required legally to maintain a certain asset to loan ratio to continue operation, and when the housing market collapsed in 2008, a lot of banks would have been forced to shut down if they had marked down the houses they had liens on down to their actual market value.
But so long as those houses didn't sell, they could be retained on the books at their original value, allowing the bank to continue operation! And they could be gradually trickled into the market at a survivable rate.
The result was the banks didn't mark the houses down and sell them cheaply at the going rate, house prices didn't drop nearly as much as they should have. So there was a glut on the market of houses stubbornly priced above the market, that couldn't sell, and remained vacant for years. And vacant houses fall into ruin!
So we came out of the 2008 housing crash with a severely reduced housing stock, especially the sort of smaller single family homes that used to represent the first rung of home ownership.
I lost my job in 2008, and had to move, and saw this first hand while house hunting around 2010: I'd check out one house after another that looked good in the (old) photos, but when I went to look at them I'd find water damage from busted pipes due to leaving the heat off and the water on. I'd find broken windows where vagrants had busted in to party. At least half the 'bargain' houses I saw were wrecks.
There are now simply a lot fewer old single family houses around than their used to be, thanks to that.
Lower the retirement age to 60, and then let them flood in to keep SS solvent.
That’s pretty much the direction anyway, just with disability for the masses as they get up in years, instead of retirement or “basic income.” I know this because NPR had a segment on it some years back.
Sounds like a plan? You can retire early if you find three immigrant Mexicans who agree to carry you.
Not such a bad deal!
At least until the Mexican Atlas decides to shrug, and stop supporting all those gringos.
"Similar consequences would occur if we were to reinstitute racial segregation, thereby severely restricting the job opportunities of black workers. While some whites would come out ahead, most would be net losers, as our economy becomes much less productive."
This is actually a bad analogy for immigration, or an ugly one, depending on how you look at it.
Remember, those black workers are just as much existing citizens as the white workers, so they actually count equally in evaluating benefits. From that perspective it's a bad analogy.
But immigrants, particularly illegal ones, are not citizens. Their welfare isn't actually supposed to count in our calculations, because the aim of government policy is supposed to be to benefit actual citizens, not everybody in the universe.
The ugly version of the analogy is to remember how exactly the US came to have blacks here in the first place: Importing slaves. The argument starts to look a lot like the old argument in favor of slavery, that they were better off her as slaves, then free in Africa, look how much worse the Africans have it. So both sides benefited!
Anyway, directly addressing the thesis:
“Housing starts”, the number of new homes actually built in a year, typically ranges from 2.4 million a year, to 1 million a year, in recent history. Excluding right after the 2020 market crash, or Covid. Since Biden took office it’s been in the range of 1.2-1.4 million a year.
We actually have a limited capacity to build new houses…
So, how many illegal immigrants entered the country last year? Over three million. That’s on top of 1 million legal immigrants. They’re literally flooding in 3x faster than we can build houses, so what else would you expect but a housing shortage?
Oh, and Somin: Can I remind you of something?
We’re not discussing people who lost their wallets. They’re not undocumented, they’re illegal. Drop the stupid euphemism already.
how many illegal immigrants entered the country last year? Over three million
Entered the country is a quite the stat to choose here. Pretty disingenuous if you think about it for *one moment.*
"The key point to remember is that the economy—including the labor market—is not a zero-sum game."
You keep forgetting that part.
If would be disingenuous if the Biden administration were deporting them, rather than releasing them into the country. Sadly, that's not the case.
I don't forget that it's not zero sum. You still can't dump people into a country faster than its established ability to build housing, and not get a housing shortage. Any more than you can dump people into a city faster than it can build roads, and not get traffic problems. Just because sums aren't zero doesn't mean the system can respond to inputs infinitely fast!
Wait, when the Woke Biden Administration™ hands out homes to illegal immigrants, it assigns each individual immigrant to a separate dwelling? This family separation policy sounds pretty hardcore!
I find the whole argument by Prof. Somin to be shallow, not very thoughtful.
In the U.S., in most locales, we have standards for construction, and for the tradesmen engaging in it. It takes time for people to become skilled tradesmen, and not all make it. Becoming an electrician, plumber, bricklayer, carpenter, framer, equipment operator, and so on, are mostly licensed trades and requires quite a bit of training and apprenticeship [1][2]. This doesn't happen overnight. And, as far as I am aware, one must have a command of the English language, both spoken and written, to achieve this.
Somin is denigrating the trades implying that hordes of unskilled, illiterate illegal immigrants are suddenly going to contribute to the construction of housing in the U.S.
Of course there are needs for unskilled, illiterate laborers - ditch diggers, and so on. But they are not the ones "building" the housing. Unless, of course, you want the kind of not-to-code crap housing that you encounter in the places from which these people come.
Further, training and apprenticeship opportunities and job opportunities in the construction trades should first go to those who are here legally; for example, high school graduates who decide to not go to college.
[1] Massachusetts
To work as a plumber in Massachusetts, you must hold a state license awarded by the Board of State Examiners of Plumbers and Gas Fitters. The state offers three plumber license classifications:
Apprentice plumber
You must show proof of employment under the supervision of a master plumber.
Journeyman plumber
You must have at least 6,800 hours of experience as a licensed apprentice under the supervision of either a licensed master plumber or a licensed journeyman plumber who is employed by a master plumber. You must also have completed at least 550 hours of plumbing theory over a period of at least four years. You must pass an exam
Master plumber
You must have held a journeyman plumbing license for at least one year, including a minimum of 1,700 hours of work experience as a journeyman plumber. You must also complete at least 110 hours of advanced plumbing theory. You must pass an exam.
[2] I know Somin is opposed to most trades licensing requirements, but I and glad they exist, as I know my house isn't going to fall down, or catch on fire, or flood if it's built by licensed tradesmen.
Other aspects Somin ignores:
- legal and civil liability associated with hiring illegal immigrants in the construction trades;
- union response to companies hiring illegal immigrants in the construction trades;
- permitting and inspection issues associated with hiring illegal immigrants in the construction trades.
If you invested in a construction company, would you be comfortable with them hiring illegals?
What if someone was injured, or a house burned down, or other disaster occurred. You would be in a weaker position if you had illegals on your payroll.
It's illegal, by the way, to do so:
The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 imposed civil and criminal fines for the unlawful hiring of aliens. A maximum penalty of six months imprisonment and a fine of $3,000 per worker may be imposed. For I-9 paperwork violations, fines range from $110 to $1,100 per employee involved. Employers are given a ten-day window to cure technical and procedural I-9 violations and a five-year statute of limitations period applies to substantive I-9 errors. Fines for knowingly hiring undocumented workers can be up to $11,000 for each worker. However, violations occurring on or after March 27, 2008, are subject to a maximum fine of $16,000.
Factors considered in determining the fines include the following:
Size of the employer
Good faith of employer
Seriousness of the violations
Previous violations
Actual involvement of unauthorized aliens
Meanwhile, in the real world, immigrants, legal and illegal, are already heavily involved in the U.S. construction industry, without any epidemic of buildings falling down.
1. I didn't reference legal immigrants, I referenced illegal immigrants;
2. define "heavily involved." Are these the people in the skilled trades, or simply unskilled laborers, hauling trash, sweeping up, lugging building supplies, cutting lawns, etc.? I think the latter.
Mass immigration is a major contributor to housing demand which causes the housing shortage. What would the US population be right now if there wasn't immigration over the last 20 or 30 years? Drastically lower. Not to say there aren't benefits from immigration as well, but we're far above the optimum level for any kind of middle class benefit.
This article would be completely correct if zoning and permitting laws weren’t a thing. But since they are, the increased housing demand for immigration far outweighs the increase in supply from more construction workers. Millions are pouring across the border and only thousands of homes are being built.
undocumented workers have no business building homes in my opinion. They are largely unskilled labor and yet builders pick them up by the truckful from home improvement store parking lots and put them to work cheaply to build homes that people pay a lot of money for. Those expensive homes, often well over a million dollars, then have problems like leaky roofs, badly installed HVAC units, and are so badly constructed the whole house literally sways in the wind. I have seen this first hand time and again. Builders drive around in 100K automobiles and live in multi-million dollar homes thanks to this cheap labor and buyers duped into buying poorly constructed homes. Builders need to pay fair wages to skilled American labor and then we will not "need" so many people here. This will free up housing and put Americans to work at decent wages. I believe that American workers would build just as many homes, just as quickly, if they were paid a fair wage for their skills and the homes would be much better quality. Home construction could be a great thing to teach in tech schools and could be a way out of poverty for young people, doing something that is rewarding and worthwhile.
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