Joint Center: U.S. Housing Supply Falls ‘Far Short’ of Needs

The Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies, Cambridge, Mass., released its 2019 State of the Nation’s Housing report this week, noting while household formation in the U.S. has “finally” returned to a more normal pace, housing production has not.

The report (https://www.jchs.harvard.edu/sites/default/files/Harvard_JCHS_State_of_the_Nations_Housing_2019.pdf) found household growth is now back from post-recession lows, but new home construction remains depressed, with additions to supply barely keeping pace with the number of new households. It attributed the dispareity to slow construction recovery, including excess supply following the housing boom, which took years to absorb; and persistent labor shortages.

“The most significant factors, however, are rising land prices and regulatory constraints on development,” said Joint Center Managing Director Chris Herbert. “These constraints, largely imposed at the local level, raise costs and limit the number of homes that can be built in places where demand is highest.”

Additionally, the report said, a large percentage of new housing being built is intended primarily for the higher end of the market. “The limited supply of smaller, more affordable homes in the face of rising demand suggests that the rising land costs and the difficult development environment make it unprofitable to build for the middle market,” it said.

The report also said the number of homeowners rose sharply, even as the ratio of median home price to median household income rose from a low of 3.3 in 2011 to 4.1 in 2018, a sign of deteriorating affordability. But conditions for would-be buyers vary widely across the country, with home values more than five times greater than incomes in roughly one in seven metro areas (primarily on the West Coast) compared with less than three times in about one in three metros (primarily in the Midwest and South).

On the renter side, the report said the number of renter households fell for the second consecutive year in 2018, a stark contrast to the increases of the 12 preceding years. Nevertheless, the report said rents are rising at twice the rate of overall inflation.

“The growing presence of higher-income renters has helped keep rental markets stable,” says Daniel McCue, a senior research associate with the Center. “This has maintained demand for new apartments, even as overall rental demand has waned.” At the lower end of the market, though, the number of units renting for under $800 fell by one million in 2017, bringing the total loss from 2011-2017 to four million.

The report said the share of U.S. households paying more than 30 percent of their income for housing declined for the seventh straight year in 2017. Much of the progress was among homeowners, though, whose cost-burden rate declined to its lowest level this century. Cost-burden rates for modest-income renter households, however, continue to rise and with burdens affecting households higher up the income scale, the issue of rental affordability is increasingly getting attention at the state and local level.

Looking ahead, the report said millennials and baby boomers will continue to push household growth, spurring demand in the remodeling market and the demand for entry-level homes. Rental growth is expected to be solid as well, with 400,000 additional renter households per year expected between 2018 and 2028. One big question mark, Herbert said, is whether the market can supply housing that is within reach of most household incomes.

“To ensure that the market can produce homes that meet the diverse needs of the growing US population, the public, private and nonprofit sectors must address constraints on the development process,” Herbert said. “And for the millions of families and individuals who struggle to find housing that fits their budget, public efforts will be necessary to close the gap between what they can afford and the cost of producing decent housing.”