White House officials are outlining plans to build and restore more than 2 million homes, a response to the volcanic rise in housing prices over the past year.


What You Need To Know

  • White House officials are outlining plans to build and restore more than 2 million homes, amid a volcanic rise in housing prices that threatens President Biden’s vision of centering the U.S. economy around the middle class

  • The news comes amid sobering new statistics for would-be home buyers: According to one price index, U.S. home prices climbed a record 19.1% between Sept. 2020 and June 2021

  • Another analysis found the U.S. is 3.8 million homes shy of what is needed to meet existing demand

  • Now, to help address this gaping supply shortage, the Biden administration has proposed a series of policy shifts aimed at increasing home construction and increasing financing options through tax credits, loans and grants

Millions of Americans are getting priced out of ownership or stuck spending the bulk of their income on rent. The S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller 20-city home price index climbed a record 19.1% in June from a year ago, as too few homes are available to buy and low interest rates have enabled affluent buyers and real estate investors to pay more for homes.

The jump in prices is a threat to President Joe Biden’s vision of centering the U.S. economy around the middle class, a group that has defined itself in large part through home ownership. Americans’ desire to own homes has also altered regional politics as suburbanites aligned with Democrats in 2020 to help give Biden key victories in Arizona and Georgia, two states that have added population through new home construction.

The White House Council of Economic Advisers on Wednesday posted on its blog a detailed analysis of the affordability problem and the administration’s plans to relieve it. Its analysis notes that housing supply has fallen short of population growth for four decades, so many of the challenges predate the disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

In their analysis, the White House Council of Economic Advisers found that house prices
"outpaced income growth in 2020, with the national price-to-income ratio rising to 4.4—the highest observed level since 2006."

Researchers at the mortgage buyer Freddie Mac estimate that the United States is 3.8 million homes shy of what is needed to meet demand. The persistent shortage has meant that home prices are steadily increasing faster than incomes, making it harder for first-time buyers to save for down payments and keeping them in rentals longer. Nearly half of renters spend more than the recommended 30% of their incomes on housing.

“In the first half of the year, the economy grew at the fastest rate seen in nearly 40 years,” the White House said in a press release Wednesday. “This economic progress has enabled millions of American homeowners and renters to get back on track.”

"In the second quarter of 2021, the mortgage delinquency rate on single-family mortgages fell to below 5.5 percent – from a pandemic high of more than 8 percent. The percentage of renter households behind on rent has also fallen from 19.4 percent to 15.4 since the beginning of this year.”

To increase home construction, Biden’s economics team proposes a series of policy shifts.

First, it intends to deliver 100,000 affordable housing units over three years through a series of administrative changes. It will increase mortgage availability through Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae for manufactured houses and buildings with two to four units. The government also intends to make it easier for would-be owners and nonprofits to buy homes that failed to sell in foreclosure auctions, as well as expand outreach to local governments and nonprofits to buy federally held homes.

The government also plans to increase the financing options for apartment buildings through tax credits, loans and grants.

Secondly, the Biden administration estimates that its economic agenda would lead to the construction and renovation of 2 million homes. This would include the use of federal subsidies, the low-income housing tax credit, a new tax credit for construction in economically vulnerable neighborhoods and incentives to remove exclusionary zoning and land use policies by local and state governments that limit new construction.

Still, the blog post cautioned that a supply crunch could linger.

“There is no magic formula to quickly relieve the supply constraints,” it concluded.