• Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest finance news and updates directly to your inbox.

Top News

Why Do You Need A Prenup If You Have A Trust?

November 24, 2025

Learn the Art of Thoughtful Gift-Giving on a Realistic Budget

November 24, 2025

Thrift Shopping for Profit? Avoid These 10 Brands, Professional Reseller Warns

November 24, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending
  • Why Do You Need A Prenup If You Have A Trust?
  • Learn the Art of Thoughtful Gift-Giving on a Realistic Budget
  • Thrift Shopping for Profit? Avoid These 10 Brands, Professional Reseller Warns
  • Financial Planner Explains Coast FIRE Vs. Financial Freedom
  • How Your Phone Can Help You Find the Best Black Friday Bargains
  • The U.S. Economy Added 119,000 Jobs in September Even as Layoffs Surged. How Can Americans Seeking Employment Make Sense of This?
  • New Ways To Close The Care Navigation Gap For Seniors And Families
  • Social Security Office Warns of Sophisticated ‘High-Pressure’ Scam — 5 Ways to Protect Yourself
Monday, November 24
Facebook Twitter Instagram
FintechoPro
Subscribe For Alerts
  • Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans
FintechoPro
Home » Building Housing Lowers Prices But “Supply Skeptics” Don’t Believe It
Taxes

Building Housing Lowers Prices But “Supply Skeptics” Don’t Believe It

News RoomBy News RoomNovember 30, 20231 Views0
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email Tumblr Telegram

As housing prices continue rising, even in the face of high interest rates, there are many calls to increase housing construction. But some voices, including on the progressive left, oppose development, wrongly saying it won’t help affordability. What is the source of this “supply skepticism”—a belief that increased housing supply won’t affect prices?

There’s no question we’re in an affordable housing crisis. In September, the S&P CoreLogic Case-Schiller Home Price Index was 3.9% higher than one year ago, and it is up by 15% over the past two years.

Home prices have risen even in the face of costlier mortgages. Driven by the Federal Reserve’s relentless interest rate increases, average 30-year mortgage rates have more than doubled in two years, topping out at 7.8% in late October. These are the highest mortgage rates in 22 years.

Higher housing costs are a major contributor to inflation. Overall, housing makes up about one-third of the Consumer Price Index (CPI), the most widely watched inflation gauge. And the housing measures enter the CPI with a time lag, further complicating our analysis of inflation.

Economist Alan Reynolds has argued that we should consider adjusting the housing component of CPI in order to get a more accurate and timely measure of inflation. That could have encouraged the Fed to moderate its interest rate increases sooner, and lessened their economic damage.

Analysts blame several things for higher housing costs. Many current homeowners are sitting on low mortgages, obtained prior to the jump in interest rates. In July , a Zillow survey found that “about 80% of mortgage holders reported having a (mortgage) rate less than 5%,” making them reluctant to sell since a new mortgage would be significantly more costly. As a result, sales of existing homes are at a 13-year low point.

For economists, there’s a simple remedy for higher prices—increase supply, in this case by building more housing. It’s a simple idea. (So simple that Saturday Night Live comedian Don Novello’s character of Father Guido Sarducci, for his “five minute university” said: “Economics? Supply and demand. That’s it.”)

But many people—including some progressive advocates for affordable housing—don’t believe increased supply will help lower rents and house prices. Their opposition has become known as “supply skepticism,” and an excellent new paper from New York University’s Vicki Been, Ingrid Gould Ellen, and Katherine M. O’Regan explores this issue.

Supply skepticism is well documented. Scholars Clayton Nall, Christopher Elmendorf, and Stan Oblobdzijasurveyed of thousands of people about it. Respondents stated a good deal of skepticism that increased housing supply would lower housing prices, with these beliefs “widespread and absolutely real,” not confined to any particular subset of opinion or demographics.

Their findings are even more puzzling because survey respondents believed in supply and demand in other markets. Unlike with housing, respondents said increased grain supplies would lower prices, and problems with new car supply chains would cause used car prices to rise. The researchers concluded: “do people think about housing in the same way they think about other markets? No.”

NYU’s Been, Ellen, and O’Regan first wrote about supply skepticism in 2019. Their new review analyzes the ever-growing body of research showing increasing housing supply slows growth in rents; frees up existing housing for others to rent; and isn’t associated with “significant displacement of lower income households.”

So why don’t people, especially affordable housing advocates, believe in supply and demand, at least when it comes to housing? It isn’t fully clear. Of course, some opponents of building housing are homeowners who simply want their property values to stay high and profit from a lack of competition.

But even advocates of more affordable housing refuse to change zoning to allow more supply. Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, very progressive on many issues and elected in part to address homelessness and affordable housing, has ordered streamlined approvals for affordable housing and homeless shelters. But she has exempted neighborhoods with single-family zoning from these provisions.

Such exemptions have major consequences. According to the Othering and Belonging Institute, 74% of Los Angeles’ residentially zoned neighborhoods are for single family housing only. That means a lot fewer places to build affordable housing. Housing advocate Maria Patińo Guitierrez fears the zoning barriers mean accelerated affordable projects will land in lower-income neighborhoods, with “L.A.’s wealthy neighborhoods…preserved at the expense of low-income ones.”

So supply skeptics are holding down housing supply, and in effect causing housing prices to rise. That’s true even for sincere affordable housing advocates. By clinging to supply skepticism, they end up in a strange alliance with wealthy homeowners, and make our housing affordability problem worse.

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

Options To Improve Child Tax Credit For Low-Income Families: An Update

Taxes November 29, 2023

The (Foreign) Gift That Keeps On Giving – IRS Penalties

Taxes November 28, 2023

IRS Doesn’t Need The Blocked Income Tax Regulations In Coca-Cola

Taxes November 27, 2023

Most Married Couples File Taxes Jointly With IRS, But Should You?

Taxes November 26, 2023

Which Trusts Save Taxes, Which Do Not, And Which Are Illegal?

Taxes November 24, 2023

12 Days Of Christmas Are More Expensive In 2023, Mirroring The Economy

Taxes November 23, 2023
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Top News

Learn the Art of Thoughtful Gift-Giving on a Realistic Budget

November 24, 20251 Views

Thrift Shopping for Profit? Avoid These 10 Brands, Professional Reseller Warns

November 24, 20251 Views

Financial Planner Explains Coast FIRE Vs. Financial Freedom

November 23, 20251 Views

How Your Phone Can Help You Find the Best Black Friday Bargains

November 23, 20251 Views
Don't Miss

The U.S. Economy Added 119,000 Jobs in September Even as Layoffs Surged. How Can Americans Seeking Employment Make Sense of This?

By News RoomNovember 23, 2025

Kues / Shutterstock.comAdvertising Disclosure: When you buy something by clicking links within this article, we…

New Ways To Close The Care Navigation Gap For Seniors And Families

November 22, 2025

Social Security Office Warns of Sophisticated ‘High-Pressure’ Scam — 5 Ways to Protect Yourself

November 22, 2025

New Bill Would Boost Social Security Benefits Temporarily. Here’s How It Would Work.

November 22, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Dribbble
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2025 FintechoPro. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.