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While public discourse focuses on mortgage rates, Zillow's CEO asserts the core problem is a massive, long-term housing supply deficit. The US is underbuilt by nearly 5 million homes, a problem originating from the 2008 financial crisis that has been exacerbated, not caused, by recent rate hikes.
Political actions like Trump's proposed "Landlord Lockout" target a symptom (Wall Street buying homes) but ignore the root cause of the housing crisis: a critical shortage of supply. The real solution requires a massive, coordinated national effort to build millions of new homes quickly.
A major disconnect exists in housing policy. Experts agree the root cause of unaffordability is a supply shortage, but voters focus on interest rates and investors. Politicians thus champion demand-side fixes and investor bans that are politically popular but have only a marginal impact on the structural problem.
Despite the current affordability crisis, underlying demographic trends from young millennials and Gen Z create a massive, long-term structural demand for housing. This will require approximately 18 million new units through 2030, irrespective of short-term market cycles.
Beyond zoning laws, the housing crisis is deeply structural. The construction sector has seen little technological innovation or productivity growth for decades. This is compounded by a shortage of buildable land near job centers and a lasting skilled labor deficit created when workers left the industry after the 2008 crash.
The housing affordability crisis is primarily a supply issue, not a mortgage rate problem. Regulations, permits, and zoning delays significantly inflate construction costs and timelines, adding an average of $93,870 to the price of each new house.
The housing crisis persists because its core issue—a lack of supply—is invisible. Unlike a tangible disaster, people don't see the communities that were never developed. This makes it harder to generate the urgency and political will needed for a solution.
The core of the housing affordability crisis is a structural lack of supply for entry-level homes and workforce rentals. Even with ideal policy interventions today, the time required for development means meaningful relief is at least 18-24 months away. There are no quick fixes that can address this underlying problem.
The current housing market is not a cyclical bubble that will pop, but a structural crisis. It's a permanent collapse of opportunity driven by policy failures, corporate consolidation, and demographic incentives that have created deep, lasting scarcity, fundamentally changing the nature of homeownership in America.
The core of the affordability crisis plaguing American families is a national shortage of 3-4 million housing units, particularly for middle-income workers and first-time buyers. This is not just a collection of local zoning issues but a macroeconomic problem that directly impacts consumer sentiment and economic well-being.
The administration's key housing initiatives, such as having Fannie/Freddie purchase $200B in MBS and banning institutional buyers of single-family homes, are designed to slightly lower mortgage costs and address political narratives. They are not structural solutions capable of fixing the fundamental undersupply of housing that drives the crisis.