America’s home affordability crisis has a solution. Lower rates isn’t it

The Federal Reserve’s interest rate cut last week has given prospective homebuyers something to celebrate: lower borrowing costs.

The half-percentage-point cut took rates off a 23-year high, where they’d been for more than a year, and the central bank signaled that more cuts could be on the way.

But while lower mortgage rates may translate to more buying power for homebuyers, America’s housing market woes aren’t likely to be solved solely by rate cuts.

A shortage of homes for sale, combined with rising expenses like homeowners’ insurance and rent, have made the cost of both owning and renting a home in America increasingly unaffordable for many, taking an ever-growing share of Americans’ paychecks and savings accounts.

“No question this is good news,” said Shaun Donovan, a former US Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, told CNN of the Fed’s rate cut. “But there’s a lot more we have to do to solve an unprecedented housing crisis in this country.”

Obstacles to building new homes

Both Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump have proposed ways to increase the housing supply. For good reason: There currently aren’t enough homes for sale to keep up with demand.

“This is a chronic, slow-growing crisis over decades that became an acute crisis during Covid,” Donovan said.

This shortage of homes has helped propel home prices to record highs. According to the National Association of Realtors, the median existing-home sales price was $416,700 in August, down slightly from the record high of $426,900 set in June.

Harris introduced a plan to build 3 million new homes, while Trump has said he plans to cut regulations that add costs to the home-building process. But Enterprise Community Partners, the nonprofit where Donovan currently serves as CEO, estimates that the US needs 7 million new units in order to stabilize the housing market.

“I am really encouraged by how much of a priority the campaigns have put on housing,” Donovan said.

The country’s housing shortage even got a mention during Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s press conference on Wednesday, shortly after the Fed announced the interest rate cut.

“The real issue with housing is that we have had and are on track to continue to have not enough housing,” he said. “Where are we going to get the supply? This is not something that the Fed can really fix… the supply question will have to be dealt with by the market and also by government.”

It won’t be easy. Danushka Nanayakkara-Skillington, the National Association of Home Builders’ assistant vice president of forecasting and analysis, said that while the Fed’s recent half-point rate cut will increase the availability of loans for homebuilders, they are still faced with other strains, including a shortage of workers, the cost of regulations, zoning restrictions and more expensive building materials.