USA TODAY US Edition

Supply chain, worker shortages fuel lag in building new houses

Consensus grows that problems getting personnel, materials may persist for rest of 2022 and beyond

- Terry Collins

Many Americans seeking to buy a newly constructe­d home are now playing the waiting game as supply-chain slowdowns and a lack of labor are adding more months before buyers can move in.

It now takes about eight months or longer to build a new home, compared with about four to 61⁄2 months before the COVID-19 pandemic, said Robert Dietz, chief economist for the National Associatio­n of Home Builders.

The housing shortage comes as demand for housing accelerate­d during the onset of the pandemic, when more Americans began working from home and sought more space.

“There’s a lack of lumber, appliances, cabinetry, electrical transforme­r equipment, land to build on and workers,” Dietz said.

Earlier this month, the NAHB said in a post that “shortages of materials are now more widespread than at any time since NAHB began tracking the issue in the 1990s, with more than 90% of builders reporting shortages of appliances, framing lumber and oriented strand board,” a type of material that’s preferred in most home building.

About nine out of 10 homebuilde­rs across the country surveyed by NAHB say that the number of available housing lots in their markets are “low or very low.”

Oh, and garage doors are in short supply, too. There’s a strong consensus that the shortage might not improve any time soon. The supply chain slowdowns and manpower shortages are expected to last through 2022, maybe even longer.

The U.S. Census Bureau said building permits for new residentia­l constructi­on dropped to a fivemonth low in April. Most of the downfall was due to a dip in single-family home constructi­on despite homebuyer demand that pushed home prices up 15.5% year over year to a median selling price of $424,405, according to real estate company Redfin.

As a result, experts say there is a new housing shortfall ranging from 1.3 million to 2 million. Moody’s Analytics projects the U.S. shortfall is about 1.5 million homes, fueling a spike in sales and rental prices.

And with inflation hitting 8.6%, the highest rate in 40 years, there’s more uncertaint­y about the state of building new houses fast enough.

“Housing, as a source of inflation, is about a third of the current inflation pressure in the U.S.,” Dietz said. “And dealing with the supply side is a part of the overall inflation challenge.”

Jerimiah Taylor, an Austin, Texas-based real estate agent and vice president of real estate and mortgage services of OJO Labs, said a look at the numbers shows the decline in new home constructi­on.

Citing April U.S. census data, Taylor said there were about 281,000 homes under constructi­on

nationwide and available for sale, roughly an additional 118,000 homes available for sale but not under constructi­on, while just 38,000 homes nationally were complete and available for sale.

“That means 91% of new homes under constructi­on aren’t ready for move-in today,” Taylor said.

Vaughan Buckley, the CEO of the Philadelph­ia-based Volumetric Building Companies, said constructi­on workers were “disappeari­ng” from the industry.

Some workers are retiring, and some are leaving the industry altogether for jobs in other sectors, he said.

Constructi­on trades lost workers after “the last extended recession, a lot of immigrant workers, those with work visas and other traditiona­l sources of field labor did not come back,” said Sean Shields, communicat­ions director of the Structural Building Components Associatio­n, a trade group representi­ng manufactur­ers. “Their spots have become tough to fill.”

The share of immigrants in constructi­on trades is 30%, said a recently released constructi­on labor market report from the Home Builders Institute, a nonprofit.

The industry faces the shortage as its workforce ages. The median age of a constructi­on worker is 41, the HBI said. Despite constructi­on companies paying an hourly average of $34, compared with nearly $32 for all private sectors, the BLS said it may still not be enough to attract workers due to the physical demands.

And many constructi­on workers need to provide hands-on training to some of their less-experience­d colleagues. “You need to do the craft to learn the craft,” Buckley said. “We’re in a bad cycle right now.”

His comments echo sentiments made by Ed Brady, the HBI’s president and CEO. Last year, Brady said that some 2.2 million new constructi­on workers were needed within the next three years to help meet the housing demand.

“That’s a staggering number,” Brady said.

The lack of supplies and workers is proving to be a “one-two punch,” said Na Zhao, an NAHB researcher. The lack of both is also having an effect on remodeling older homes, Zhao added.

Zhao said a friend bought a second house about a year ago in the D.C. area, but hasn’t moved in because the house needs some upgrades that can’t be completed thanks to the supply chain shortage.

She is currently paying mortgages on two homes, Zhao said.

And with housing sales slightly easing, Zhao said her friend is worried if she “missed the peak” selling market for the first home.

 ?? ALEXANDRA BUXBAUM/SIPA USA VIA AP ?? The metro Phoenix area is in the midst of a housing shortage that is pushing up home prices, and housing needed for the Valley’s rapidly growing population is taking longer to build due to labor and material shortages.
ALEXANDRA BUXBAUM/SIPA USA VIA AP The metro Phoenix area is in the midst of a housing shortage that is pushing up home prices, and housing needed for the Valley’s rapidly growing population is taking longer to build due to labor and material shortages.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Experts say there is a new housing shortfall ranging from 1.3 million to 2 million units across the U.S.
GETTY IMAGES Experts say there is a new housing shortfall ranging from 1.3 million to 2 million units across the U.S.

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