Tags: economic impact

New Homes Strengthen Economy Year-Round

Posted by NAHB

April 4, 2011

While the housing industry celebrates New Homes Month in April, home builders want Americans to know just how much of a positive, direct impact residential construction has on the U.S. economy throughout the entire year.

“Home building is a key driver of the American economy,” said NAHB Chairman Bob Nielsen, a home builder from Reno, Nev. “By generating economic activity including new income and jobs, purchases of goods and services, and revenue for local governments, housing—which has historically accounted for around 17 percent of the GDP—can put America back to work.”

Economists at the National Association of Home Builders estimate that the one-year local impacts of building 100 single-family homes in a typical metro area include $21.1 million in local income, $2.2 million in taxes and other local government revenue, and 324 local jobs.

The employment effects extend beyond the home building industry. About half of the jobs are in construction, with the other 50 percent creating employment opportunities in industries ranging from production and sales of home furnishings to service providers such as real estate attorneys and landscapers.

Those 100 new homes also provide the community with additional, annually-recurring impacts of $3.1 million in local income, $743,000 in taxes and other revenue for local governments, and 53 local jobs.

The income earned from construction activity is spent and recycled in the local economy, and the new homes that are built become occupied by residents who pay taxes and buy locally produced goods and services. Those tax revenues help pay for a wide range of government services, including local school teachers, police departments and road repairs.

In order to accommodate population growth and necessary replacement of older homes, however, a long-run trend of approximately 1.7 million new homes a year is needed. Yet as of February 2011, the annual projection for housing starts stood at less than 500,000.

“The gap between actual home starts and what is required to fulfill America’s future housing needs represents more than 3 million jobs,” said Nielsen. “Restoring the health of the housing industry is a crucial first step in stabilizing our country’s path to economic recovery.”

During New Homes Month, home builders also bring attention to the advantages of newly-built homes, including safety, amenities, energy efficiency and floor plans to fit a wide variety of modern lifestyles. Combined with today’s near record-low interest rates and competitive prices, the current market offers new home buyers unprecedented opportunities.

Home buyers can access resources to help guide them through the home-buying process on NAHB’s website at www.nahb.org/forconsumers.

New homes create jobs, local income, and local tax revenue

by Philip Eaton
Published on: May 13, 2009
Categories: Industry statistics
Comments: No Comments

The Housing Policy Department of the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) completed their economic impact analysis of the Indianapolis MSA to demonstrate the economic impact of home building on our local communities. The detailed reports demonstrate how the home building industry benefits the local economy through job creation and income from new residents. 

 

The NAHB model is divided into three phases:  (1) local industries involved in homebuilding (2) ripple effect experienced when the wages and profits for local area residents earned during the construction period are spent on other locally produced goods and services, and (3) ongoing, annual effect that results from the home being occupied. 

 

According to the report, the economic impact of the 4,460 single-family housing permits issued in 2008 in the Indianapolis MSA includes:

 

  • $765 million in local income,
  • $73 million in taxes and other revenue for local governments, and
  • 11,717 local jobs.

 

These local impacts represent income and jobs for residents of the Indianapolis MSA and taxes (and other sources of revenue, including permit fees) for all local jurisdictions within the metro area. They are also one-year impacts that include both the direct and indirect impact of the construction activity itself, and the impact of local residents who earn money from the construction activity spending part of it within the local area.

 

Additionally, there is an annual recurring impact of building the 4,460 single-family homes.  This impact results from the new homes being occupied and the occupants paying taxes and otherwise participating in the local economy year after year, totaling:

  • $122 million in local income,
  • $26 million in taxes and other revenue for local governments, and
  • 2,093 local jobs.

 

“The impact of the homebuilding industry is unlike any other.  In 2008, it accounted for 11% of the GDP, more than three times what the automobile industry produced,” says Steve Lains of BAGI.  “At times like this, we truly see how much the housing industry benefits our communities and how important it is to continue building.” 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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