USA TODAY US Edition

Biden wants to close housing supply gap

President to ramp up production, financing

- Joey Garrison Contributi­ng: Terry Collins

WASHINGTON – Amid skyrocketi­ng prices, President Joe Biden’s administra­tion is taking steps to spur more affordable housing as the White House seeks to close the U.S. “housing supply gap” in five years.

Among the efforts is an increase in federal assistance to help finance and produce more factory-built homes, including mobile homes.

Freddie Mac announced it is exploring purchasing chattel loans, on which the majority of homeowners who buy manufactur­ed homes rely rather than traditiona­l mortgages.

The Federal Housing Finance Agency committed to work with lenders to begin a pilot program to offer financing for the constructi­on and renovation of accessory dwelling units, which are typically cheaper than traditiona­l homes. This housing includes garage apartments, backyard homes and inlaw suites.

These and other measures were outlined in a housing supply action plan the Biden administra­tion unveiled Monday.

Biden faces increasing pressure to find solutions to address 40-year-high inflation, which the president called his “top domestic priority” last week. The USA has a shortfall of 1.5 million homes in the housing supply, according to Moody’s Analytics, helping fuel a spike in rental and sale prices.

The Biden administra­tion is ramping up financial incentives for jurisdicti­ons that allow greater housing density in zoning and land use policy. The Department of Transporta­tion prioritize­d density and rural main street revitaliza­tion this year in three grant packages totaling $6 billion. The department will continue such criteria in grants.

To jump-start constructi­on, Fannie Mae is exploring expanding its loan offerings to developers to finance the constructi­on of multifamil­y housing in a single closing loan that would serve as a permanent mortgage.

Biden’s plan aims at the practice of large-scale investors buying singlefami­ly homes in low-income neighborho­ods. The Federal Housing Administra­tion will make foreclosed, real-estate-owned properties available to owner-occupants and nonprofits for 30 days before opening them to all bidders. The Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t has taken similar steps for vacant property it holds.

Home prices increased nearly 20% in major cities in February, according to the latest S&P Core-Logic Case-Shiller national home price index. Research by the National Associatio­n of Home Builders found the cost of building materials increased 33% since the start of the pandemic.

The White House encourages states and cities to use unspent dollars from $350 billion in direct aid from the American Rescue Plan, which passed in spring 2021, on preserving or adding affordable housing. Local and state government­s committed $3.2 billion in COVID-19 rescue funds to housing.

Biden’s plan launches an effort across the federal government and private sector to finish constructi­on on the most new homes in the USA since 2006.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? U.S. home sales skyrockete­d during the COVID-19 pandemic, hitting a 15-year high of 6.1 million in 2021. The spike in demand, coupled with declining inventory, put pressure on prices.
GETTY IMAGES U.S. home sales skyrockete­d during the COVID-19 pandemic, hitting a 15-year high of 6.1 million in 2021. The spike in demand, coupled with declining inventory, put pressure on prices.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States