NAHB calls for US to end lumber tariffs, boost domestic production

The National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) urged the Biden administration to increase domestic production of timber from federal lands and to work with Canada on a new softwood lumber agreement that will eliminate tariffs during a virtual White House listening session today on resolving the lumber and building material supply chain crisis.

“Historically high price levels for lumber and other building materials are dramatically affecting home prices and rental costs and threaten the nation’s economic stability,” said NAHB Chairman Jerry Konter, a home builder and developer from Savannah, Ga.

He told administration officials that home building material costs are up 20 per cent year-over-year. And since last August, the price of framing lumber has more than tripled and oriented strand board prices have doubled.

“These supply chain price increases have only added to the ongoing housing affordability crisis,” Konter said.

Lumber production has not kept pace with demand despite record-high lumber prices and tariffs that are protecting domestic producers and raising costs for builders and home buyers.

In October 2021, domestic lumber production was only 0.4 per cent higher than the previous year and today stands lower than it was in 2018, despite an increase in demand. And domestic sawmill production increased by just 500 jobs last year despite historically high lumber prices.

“If our trade protectionist policies are not creating domestic jobs or increasing domestic production, then it’s time to revisit our trade positions,” said Konter. “Few things would have a more immediate impact on lumber markets than a swift resolution to our ongoing trade dispute with Canada over softwood lumber.”

Konter also said that significant reductions in timber production from federally owned lands since the 1990s has severely constricted domestic supply. He called on policymakers to do their part to help boost domestic production by seeking higher targets for timber sales from publicly-owned lands and opening up additional federal forest lands for logging in an environmentally sustainable manner.

“Housing can do its part to create jobs and lead the economy forward, but in order to do so, we need to address skyrocketing lumber and building material prices and chronic production bottlenecks,” said Konter.

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How about someone calling for home builders to slow down to a pace where all products cam be supplied…1.3mm starts. There is no stop watch running.

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If mortgage rates back up enough some of the problem might take care of itself.

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How about using alternative building products besides wood-based materials? Last I checked OSB was at 1200/msf where magnesium oxide, which is far superior to OSB and is fireproof and waterproof is still at 545/msf, up just a tiny bit due to currency exchange. Gee, if we got rid of the tariffs, the domestic wood products guys would never had the chance to raise their prices and inflation would never had happened.

The two greatest benefits of international trade are it keeps peace among nations and IT CHECKS INFLATION. As President Ronald Reagan said in 1987: “excellence deserves competition”. Well, the current inflation that will almost certain spark another housing bust is always and will always be caused by government interference. This is the fallacy of the America First policy; its called mercantilism and it fails, like socialism, everywhere its tried and the end result is always “INFLATION”.

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::slight_smile:

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