4:25
Brief
The Rundown
A look at how tariffs, deportations and more of Trump鈥檚 proposals could affect housing costs
A 鈥楩or Sale鈥 sign is seen on March 19 in Austin, Texas. Policymakers are watching for indications of what President-elect Donald Trump plans to do to ease housing costs next year after an election where voters were laser-focused on the economy. (Brandon Bell/Getty Images)
Americans hand over a huge chunk of their paycheck for a roof over their heads. Policymakers are looking out for indications of what President-elect Donald Trump plans to do to ease housing costs next year after an election where voters were laser-focused on the economy.
Housing accounted for聽聽of consumers鈥 spending in 2023, making it the largest share of consumer expenditures, according to the most recently available data Bureau of Labor Statistics. And that was an increase of 4.7% from 2022.
This year, many Americans still struggle to find affordable housing, whether they choose to rent or buy a home.
There鈥檚 a lot economists and housing advocates still don鈥檛 know about what to expect from a second Trump term. It鈥檚 unclear which campaign promises will find their way into administrative rules or聽 legislation, even with a Republican trifecta 鈥 the GOP will control the White House and both chambers of Congress.
But policy experts, researchers and economic analysts are looking at Trump鈥檚 record, his recent remarks on housing, and聽聽聽鈥 the conservative Heritage Foundation鈥檚 900-page plan to overhaul the executive branch 鈥 for a glimpse of what may lie ahead.
Tariffs and the cost of building homes
Trump has spoken frequently of his proposed 60% tariff on goods from China, which he has said would create more manufacturing jobs in the U.S. Tariffs could be as high as
20% on goods from other countries.
But housing economists and other experts say that could be bad news for building more affordable housing.
Selma Hepp, chief economist for CoreLogic, a financial services company, said tariffs are one of her main concerns about the effects of a second Trump term.
鈥淥ne of the biggest concerns is not just lumber [costs], but the overall cost of materials, which have been going up,鈥 Hepp said.
Construction material prices have risen 38.8% since February 2020,聽聽an Associated Builders and Contractors鈥 analysis of October Producer Price Index data.
Kurt Paulsen, professor of urban planning in the department of planning and landscape architecture at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, said building costs are already high from tariffs on Canadian lumber that Trump first imposed and that the Biden administration kept and increased.
鈥淚t used to be in construction that you would get a bid from a contractor or a subcontractor or supplier and it would be good for 60 days. Now, the bids are good for like five days because you don鈥檛 know where prices are going to be,鈥 he said.
Immigration policy and its effect on construction labor
罢谤耻尘辫听聽on Nov. 18 that he is planning to use the declaration of a national emergency as part of his mass聽 deportation plan.
Besides disrupting lives, Trump鈥檚 plan聽 could have effects on what it costs to build housing, Hepp said.
鈥淭here is the cost of labor as well, if we do indeed have all these deportations. That鈥檚 a big, big concern,鈥 she said. 鈥淎 large share of labor in the construction industry obviously comes from immigrants. That is a huge issue for new construction and particularly new construction as it relates to affordable housing.鈥
Foreign-born construction workers made up聽聽of the 11.9 million people who work in the construction industry in 2023, according to the latest American Community Survey data.
Trump鈥檚 鈥榥ot in my backyard鈥櫬 rhetoric
The former president hasn鈥檛 always been clear on where he stands with zoning regulations and making way for more affordable housing in a wide variety of neighborhoods.
In a July Bloomberg interview, Trump spoke critically of zoning regulations and said that they drive up housing costs. But Trump also has a record of tending toward a 鈥渘ot in my backyard,鈥 or NIMBY, approach to housing that maintained some of these zoning regulations. The Trump administration moved to roll back an Obama-era regulation that tied HUD funding to assessing and reducing housing discrimination in neighborhoods.
鈥淗e鈥檒l talk about reducing regulations on developers, but he鈥檒l also use this NIMBYism talking about protecting suburbs from low-income housing and you really can鈥檛 have it both ways,鈥 said Sarah Saadian, senior vice president of public policy and field organizing at the National Low Income Housing Coalition.
Paulsen said Project 2025 embraces a pushback against anti-NIMBY approaches to expand multi-family housing.
鈥淲hat I read in the Project 2025 documents is a clear statement that says every local community and neighborhood should be able to choose the housing it wants to accept or not. The challenge of that is that if every community in every neighborhood can veto housing, then we just don鈥檛 get enough housing and prices go up and prices and rents go up,鈥 he said.
A more punitive approach to homelessness聽
Last year, homelessness rose to its highest level recorded since the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development began collecting this information in 2007. The ending of pandemic safety nets that gave some households better financial stability and a lack of affordable housing supply contributed to the number of unhoused people, the report explained.
Trump has been outspoken on his view that homeless people should be 鈥渙ff our streets.鈥 The president-elect has also proposed putting unhoused people with mental health issues into 鈥渕ental institutions.鈥
鈥淭here鈥檚 a movement that I think is largely reflected in Project 2025 that says, actually, cities need more coercive policy tools to enforce public order and to require that someone who鈥檚 camping take a shelter placement even if they don鈥檛 want it,鈥 Paulsen said.
Saadian said that given the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in聽Grants Pass v. Johnson, which makes it easier to criminalize unhoused populations for sleeping outside, she鈥檚 worried about a changing political environment where policies that prioritize stable housing over policing fall out of favor.
鈥淚 think all of that just shows a culture shift in the political dynamic here that we鈥檙e definitely worried about,鈥 she said.
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