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For release on delivery
10:00 a.m. EST (9:00 a.m. local time)
January 16, 2020

The Outlook for Housing

Remarks by
Michelle W. Bowman
Member
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at the
2020 Economic Forecast Breakfast
Home Builders Association of Greater Kansas City
Kansas City, Missouri

January 16, 2020

Few sectors are as central to the success of our economy and the lives of
American families as housing. If we include the amount families spend on shelter each
month as well as the construction of new houses and apartments, housing generates about
15 cents out of every dollar of economic activity. As homebuilders, you set the
foundation that supports the work of architects, bankers, electricians, carpenters,
plumbers, furniture makers, and many others. In our time together today, I’d like to
discuss the outlook for housing at the national level and also look at the labor force and
credit challenges facing your industry. 1
Let me start with just a few words about the overall economic picture. I’m
pleased to say that the U.S. economy is currently in a good place, and the baseline
outlook of participants on the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) is for continued
moderate growth in gross domestic product (GDP) over the next few years.
Unemployment is the lowest it has been in 50 years, and FOMC participants expect it to
remain low. Inflation has been muted and is expected to rise gradually to the FOMC’s
2 percent objective.
One of the most remarkable features of the current economic expansion has been
the vitality and resilience of the U.S. job market. More than 22 million jobs have been
created since the low point for employment at the end of the last downturn, and the pace
of job gains has been amazingly consistent. Until this expansion, even in good times,
scarcely a year went by without at least one month when payrolls shrank. Yet during the
past 10 years, we haven’t had a single month with a decline in the overall number of jobs.
I should note that I would not necessarily consider a single month of job losses as saying

1

These remarks represent my own views, which do not necessarily represent those of the Federal Reserve
Board or the Federal Open Market Committee.

-2much about the direction of the economy. But the unbroken string of job gains that we
have experienced during this recovery highlights how our economy has kept humming
along during this past decade, weathering the occasional lull. Let me also add here that,
as good as the national numbers for the job market look, things seem even better here in
the Kansas City area, where job growth has been steady and the unemployment rate has
consistently run around 1 percentage point below the national average—at last count, it
was 2.8 percent.
Let me now turn to the main topic of my talk today. My colleagues and I at the
Federal Reserve pay close attention to developments in the housing sector, in part
because it has historically been such an important driver of economic growth. In the
national economic data, the part of GDP that includes homebuilding activity is referred to
as residential fixed investment. This measure summarizes a variety of housing-related
activities, including spending on the construction of new single-family and multifamily
structures, residential remodeling, real estate brokers’ fees, and a few other smaller
components.
If we look at the growth of residential fixed investment in periods since World
War II that are defined as economic expansions, we see that this broad category has
increased at an average rate of around 7 percent per year, faster than the roughly
4 percent pace of GDP growth in those same periods. And, as many of you know from
experience, the opposite is true as well—that housing activity tends to experience
relatively large declines in economic downturns. In particular, residential fixed
investment declined an average of about 15 percent annually during periods defined as

-3recessions, compared with an average annual rate of decline in GDP of just 2 percent in
those same periods.
These numbers illustrate that residential fixed investment is particularly sensitive
to where we are in the business cycle. The strong economy we are experiencing now has
an obvious upside for the housing sector: A robust job market translates into higher
incomes, greater confidence, and more people looking to buy a new home or considering
whether to make a change from their current home.
Yet even though the financial crisis and the bursting of the real estate bubble
occurred more than a decade ago, all of us here are no doubt aware of the lasting imprint
that those developments left on the housing market. On an annual basis, both new and
existing home sales did not increase again until 2012, and they remained at modest levels
for several years thereafter. Given the large and persistent inventory overhang of unsold
homes in the aftermath of the crisis, the construction of new homes was also sluggish for
many years into the recovery.
Part of the weak recovery in the housing market during the first few years of this
expansion can be traced to extremely tight mortgage credit conditions. Despite the fact
that the Fed slashed interest rates and kept them low for many years, many households
were underwater on their existing mortgages, with more owed on their housing than their
homes were worth, while others were unable to obtain a loan to finance a new purchase.
As a result, housing demand remained very weak for an extended period.
Another factor that played a role in the slow housing recovery was the low rate of
household formation, which dropped significantly during the recession and remained low
for most of the following decade. Much of this drop was due to a larger share of young

-4people continuing to live with their parents, though this is not unusual when the economy
is weak and jobs are hard to find. 2
In the past few years, though, we have seen some encouraging signs that the
broader strength in the economy has eased these housing market headwinds. Along with
ongoing improvements in households’ balance sheet conditions, mortgage credit
conditions appear to be less of a constraint for creditworthy borrowers. I should add that
housing activity is also being supported by interest rates that remain quite low by
historical standards, with the fixed rate charged on a 30-year mortgage now below
4 percent, substantially lower than the rates observed just before the last recession. As
you well know, activity in the housing sector is highly sensitive to interest rates and other
factors that have a powerful effect on the overall cost of owning a home.
In addition, amid the strong job market of the past few years, we have seen a rise
in the rate at which young adults are moving out of their family homes and forming
households of their own. Even so, millions of young adults are still living with their
parents who likely wouldn’t have been before the crisis. While their reasons for doing so
are probably varied, there is potential for many more individuals to shift back to forming
new households.
Although the effects may evolve slowly, the higher rate of household formation
will eventually result in higher demand for housing and encourage further increases in
homebuilding. Home sales have been rising in recent years, the percentage of homes that
are vacant has been falling, and inventories of both new and existing homes for sale have

2

See, for example, Aditya Aladangady, Laura Feiveson, and Andrew Paciorek (2019), “Living at Home
Ain’t Such a Drag (on Spending): Young Adults’ Spending in and out of Their Parents’ Home,” FEDS
Notes (Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, February 5),
https://doi.org/10.17016/2380-7172.2301.

-5drifted back down to relatively low levels. In fact, at this point, the residential real estate
market is quite tight in some areas of the country and by enough that I have heard that the
volume of home sales is being restricted by the low inventory of homes on the market.
The most recent housing data have been encouraging: Both new and existing
home sales moved up strongly in the second half of 2019, and traffic of prospective
buyers in new homes for sale and expected sales within the next six months have
approached all-time highs. Permits for new residential construction, which had been
sluggish early last year, recently moved up to highs for this expansion. In all, the
national indicators suggest a positive growth outlook for the housing sector over the next
several quarters.
Before I conclude, I’d like to address two challenges currently facing the housing
sector. The first relates to the difficulties that some employers face, including
homebuilders, in finding and retaining qualified and skilled workers. To provide some
context, the national data show that the unemployment rate in the private construction
industry is now well below the rate we observed in the early 2000s, a time when the
housing market was booming. In addition, the ratio of job vacancies to unemployment in
the construction industry—a measure of labor market strength—shot up to historic highs
at the end of 2018, and it has remained near those levels. These indicators confirm what I
have been hearing from construction industry employers during my visits to different
parts of the country—it’s extremely difficult to find and hire workers, skilled or
otherwise.
In response to these hiring-related challenges, we have seen a renewed and broad
focus on workforce development initiatives by the public and private sector, a

-6development we have followed closely at the Federal Reserve. I recently heard a very
encouraging presentation from representatives of vocational training organizations about
progress they are making in connecting young adults, students, and high school grads
with skilled trades. I am hopeful that these efforts, along with a continued strong job
market, will encourage more people to join—or, in some cases, rejoin—the construction
trades.
The second challenge I want to highlight relates to the declining presence of
community banks in the consumer real estate mortgage market. As regulatory burdens
have risen, many community banks have significantly scaled back their lending or exited
the mortgage market altogether. These developments concern me for several reasons.
Home mortgage lending has traditionally been a significant business for smaller banks,
and the decline in this business threatens a part of the banking industry that plays a
crucial role in communities. Bankers who are present and active in their communities
know and understand their customers and the local market better than lenders outside the
area. Because of their local knowledge and customer relationships, they are often more
willing to help troubled borrowers work their way through difficult times.
These two challenges notwithstanding, I remain optimistic about the outlook for
housing. I expect construction to continue advancing to meet the underlying expansion in
housing demand from population growth and the strong economy. In addition, low
interest rates will continue to be a key factor supporting growth in housing activity. As
reported in the latest Summary of Economic Projections, released in December, most
FOMC participants see the current target range for the federal funds rate as likely to

-7remain appropriate this year as long as incoming information remains broadly consistent
with the economic outlook I described earlier.
In closing, let me say that I would also appreciate hearing what is on your minds.
As a policymaker, I particularly value opportunities to travel outside of Washington to
hear your perspectives on the national and local economies. These conversations
improve our work at the Fed by helping us make better-informed decisions.