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Housing Starts Fall Further in March
New-home construction continued to lag in March, according to the latest figures
released by the U.S. Commerce Department. Total housing starts fell
nearly 12 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 947,000
units for the month, while single-family starts fell 5.7 percent
to a rate of 680,000 units.
The single-family side of the housing market continued to display
persistent and sizeable declines in both new-home starts and permits
for new construction in March, with starts down 5.7 percent to 680,000
units and permits down 6.2 percent to 606,000 units. Meanwhile,
the multifamily side continued to display extreme month-to-month
volatility in starts and permits, with 24.6 percent and 5 percent
declines, respectively.
Regionally, housing starts were down across the board in March,
with an 8.5 percent decline registered in the Northeast, a 21.4
percent decline in the Midwest, a 12.6 percent decline in the South
and a 5.7 percent decline in the West. Permit issuance was mixed
by region, with gains of 3.8 percent and 0.4 percent registered
for the Northeast and South, respectively, and declines of 10.6
percent and 20 percent registered for the Midwest and West, respectively.
"Builders are dramatically limiting starts of new homes in
an environment of weak sales and heavy supply, ratcheting down production
of single-family units to its slowest pace in 17 years," says
NAHB president Sandy Dunn, a home builder from Point Pleasant, W.Va.
"We're doing everything in our power to bring the supply and
demand equation back into balance and restore housing to its rightful
place as an engine of economic growth. But now that we are in a
genuine economic recession, there's no question that more needs
to be done at the federal level to support housing, shore up consumer
confidence and limit the degree and duration of the economic contraction."
"The Senate has done a fine job already in moving forward with
beneficial legislation, and we applaud its efforts to this point,"
added Dunn. "We urge the House to do the same thing and quickly
advance a bill that can be reconciled with the Senate's version
and promptly sent to the President's desk. Now is the time, during
the spring home buying season, to implement measures that will have
the greatest positive effect on housing and the economy."
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