
New household creation data is providing new perspective on the unprecedented housing market demand of the period between 2019 and 2021.
Daniel McCue provides analysis of household growth in the United States in a post for the Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University.
McCue writes:
Three household surveys released over the past few months by the Census Bureau all show nearly unprecedented levels of household growth from 2019 through 2021. The American Community Survey (ACS), Housing Vacancy Survey (CPS/HVS), and American Housing Survey (AHS) each report that annual household growth between 2019 and 2021 averaged between 2.0 million and 2.4 million per year (Figure 1). This level of household growth is well above the 1.4-1.5 million per year pace averaged in 2017-2019, prior to the pandemic, which itself was already higher than previous levels or the 1.2 million households per year average baseline growth rate for 2018-2028 that we projected in 2018.
Some of that household growth was accomplished by the largest generation in the nation’s history (i.e., Millennials) coming of age, according to McCue, peaking a trend that had been building since 2016. But economic factors also contributed, including increased wages and decreased unemployment. “Three rounds of stimulus payments helped adults grow savings for deposits or downpayments, and the pause in student loan payments left borrowers an average of $200 per month to spend on other items,” adds McCue.
A final factor, a sharp growth in the share of the population heading their own household, also contributed to household growth, according to McCue, but also indicates that the trend will be temporary: “Headship rates for most age groups have recovered to rates from a decade ago, and with deteriorating affordability for both renters and homeowners over the past year, further gains in household formation may be limited.” With population growth returning to its previous role as the primary driver of household growth as a result, the smaller generations following the Millennials will place less pressure on the housing market.
A lot more detail on these themes, including useful infographics, are included in the source article below.
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