Action on Supply Chain Bottlenecks, Tariffs Needed to Boost Housing Affordability
Post was updated on Oct. 21, 2021.
NAHB today called on Congress and the Biden administration to help ease building material supply chain bottlenecks that are harming housing affordability by removing trade barriers and seeking solutions to port congestion and persistent delays in truck and rail transportation.
Testifying before the House Small Business Subcommittee on Oversight, Investigations, and Regulations, NAHB Chairman Chuck Fowke told lawmakers that disruptions in the building materials supply chain that have been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic are having a disproportionate impact on smaller home building firms.
“Without large economies of scale, small businesses generally cannot negotiate bulk discounts on lumber and other key building materials,” said Fowke. “The effects of this uncertainty trickle all the way to the buyer, many of whom have balked at projects at the last minute due to unexpected price increases.“
Historically high lumber and building materials prices continue to serve as headwinds for the U.S. housing sector and impede housing affordability. The price of framing lumber hit an all-time high of more than $1,500 per thousand board feet in mid-May, according to Random Lengths.
NAHB Chairman Chuck Fowke and Rep. Beth Van Duyne (R-Texas), ranking member, Subcommittee on Oversight, House Committee on Small Business, before today’s hearing.
To put this figure in perspective, the previous record high before prices began their historical climb in April 2020 was just below $600 per thousand board feet. And while lumber prices began a sharp decline in May 2021, it took months for a meaningful portion of those reductions to reach home builders and their customers. Last month, lumber prices began rising again and have increased more than 40% over the past six weeks.
And it’s not just lumber that has posted significant price hikes. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics Producer Price Index, the average price of goods used as inputs to residential construction has risen 13.2% year to date, more than triple the rate of core inflation over the same period.
“From steel mill products and plastic piping to cooper pipe and wood windows and doors, prices are up dramatically year-to-date and are exacerbating the growing housing affordability crisis,” said Fowke. “Small home building firms are particularly threatened by the current situation.”
To tackle the nation’s troubled building materials supply chain, Fowke told lawmakers that Congress and the administration must address two fundamental problems.
“On the trade front, until a long-term solution can be reached, Congress and the administration should temporarily suspend duties on a wide array of imported building materials and goods, from Canadian softwood lumber to Chinese steel and aluminum,” said Fowke. “In addition, policymakers must continue to aggressively explore solutions to ease building material supply chain disruptions that are causing project delays and putting upward pressure on home prices.”
Latest from NAHBNow
Dec 03, 2025
What Percentage of the Housing Market Are Teardowns?In 2024, 6.9% of new single-family detached homes were teardowns (structures torn down and rebuilt in older neighborhoods), and another 20.1% were built on infill lots in older neighborhoods, according to the latest Builder Practices Survey (BPS) conducted by Home Innovation Research Labs.
Dec 02, 2025
NAHB Legal Action Fund Grants to Help Combat 3 Key IssuesAt the 2025 Fall Leadership Meeting, the NAHB Board of Directors approved the Legal Action Committee’s recommendation to award Legal Action Fund assistance grants in support of eight cases spanning three key industry issues.
Latest Economic News
Dec 02, 2025
Single-Family Construction Loan Volume Rises in the Third QuarterSingle-family construction lending picked up in the third quarter, amidst the overall cooling lending environment. Loan balances for 1-4 family construction grew to $91.2 billion in the third quarter, registering the first annual increase in over two years.
Dec 01, 2025
About 7% of New Homes Are TeardownsIn 2024, 6.9% of new single-family detached homes were teardowns (structures torn down and rebuilt in older neighborhoods), and another 20.1% were built on infill lots in older neighborhoods, according to the latest Builder Practices Survey (BPS) conducted by Home Innovation Research Labs.
Nov 26, 2025
Property Taxes by State – 2024Nationally, across the 87 million owner-occupied homes in the U.S., the average amount of annual real estate taxes paid in 2024 was $4,271, according to NAHB analysis of the 2024 American Community Survey.