CrustyRedXpress said:
Lots of right vs. left wing disagreement going on here. Probably time to find some common ground.
Can everybody agree that the united states has a housing shortage of between 2.5-6 million units?
-Freddie Mac says 2.5-3.3M depending on how you measure the shortage: https://www.freddiemac.com/research/insight/20200227-the-housing-supply-shortage
-Realtor.com says 2.5-6M: https://www.realtor.com/news/trends/the-housing-shortage-has-hit-crisis-levels/
If that's the case, can everybody also get behind the idea that building more units will help lower prices?
Honestly as is usually the case, the answer is "It depends".
Yes, the US has a housing shortage. But building more units in WV wont do a thing to help the problem, because WV has the largest housing surplus in the nation (according to the data you linked).
Everything about housing and demand is localized. Everything. As your link shows.
According to your data, it looks to me like there is a pretty significant issue on the 2 coasts, but the middle of the country mostly has a surplus. If I am counting right, it looks like 22 states have housing SURPLUSES. That's almost half the states.
I think it is also important to consider the cultural shifts. The FannieMae data you linked is a comparison to the housing vacancies experienced from 1970-2000. It assumes that period was some sort of heyday that we should emulate, and I am really not sure why. We are comparing a time when there was no internet, 57% of women did not work outside the home, the median house size was 1500 SF (its 2310 SF now), and the demographics of our country was substantially different. Population has increased 50% since then. Are the vacancy rates from 1970 an appropriate target for establishing our housing need today? I have no idea. I know an awful lot of people who are choosing to live differently than we chose to live in 1970.
Blaming the "housing shortage" on greedy investors is just silly. The construction industry can't keep up with demand, largely because of a cultural shift in how we view housing and construction jobs. For every 5 people who leave the construction industry, we gain only 1. (For construction leadership positions, the ratio is 7:1). We now live in an age when our cultural mindset (especially for young people) is that we want jobs that involve us working in office environments with computers. Construction can't attract people away from this deeply held desire. So, be prepared for the fact that housing shortages will never lessen, because we will never have enough construction labor to close the gap.
I would suggest that this isn't exactly a housing shortage. It's a complete redefining of how we relate to housing and define our needs. We DESIRE jobs with AC and computers, and we CHOOSE to change how we live in order to finance that lifestyle. We are WILLING to cohabitate, rent, increase housing size, increase occupancy rates, and carry bigger and bigger housing costs in order to have the cultural priorities we CHOOSE.
Prices will not come down, construction job salaries will continue to skyrocket, construction jobs will remain empty, and the migration of workers from other countries to attempt to meet the demand will continue to rise (because they are smart). Because these are the choices we have MADE. Rinse, repeat.
I am not convinced that is a shortage. Sure, its a shortage compared to 1970 rates, but we lived a LOT differently then.