US housing starts fall 0.8 pct., a 2nd straight monthly drop
WASHINGTON — Homebuilders slowed their pace of construction by 0.8 per cent in August, the second straight monthly decline. A steep drop in multifamily construction more than offset a slight gain in single-family-home building.
The overall drop occurred even though would-be homebuyers face both a shortage of properties for sale and escalating prices. Those two forces would normally help spur faster home construction. But builders are struggling with a shortage of skilled workers and rising land costs for development.
The tepid sales numbers suggest that it has become more profitable for companies to build a smaller number of homes for the affluent than to ramp up construction for a broader swath of buyers and renters.
Housing starts slipped last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.18 million, the Commerce Department said Tuesday. Starts fell in the Northeast and South but rose in the Midwest and West.