Deregulation, cheaper mortgages and manufactured homes: How Trump plans to solve housing crisis
UPDATING Americans are increasingly concerned about affordability issues and, chief among them, housing affordability as a part of the American dream.
By Amanda Head
Published: April 14, 2026 11:08pm
On Monday, the White House released the 2026 Economic Report of the President prepared by the Council of Economic Advisers. It reviews Trump administration policies, including a key chapter on Protecting and Rebuilding the American Dream of Homeownership, which proposed innovative and creative solutions to past issues that led to the current housing crisis.
“We’ve got a 10 million home shortfall, and we’re operating like it's 1946 instead of 2026,” Paolo Tiramani, CEO of BOXABL, told Just The News.
The Housing Crisis and Its Root CausesThe White House report addressed one of the root causes of the crisis, estimating that the national shortage of millions of single-family homes is primarily due to slowed construction after the 2008 financial crisis. It also noted how prior policies raised house prices and mortgage rates, and blamed excessive regulations for inflating building costs.
Other issues have contributed as well: Many communities have zoning laws that limit or prohibit higher-density housing like apartments, duplexes, or townhomes, especially in desirable areas. Local opposition often blocks new development, artificially constraining supply even where demand is strong and contributing to higher prices.
Furthermore, the cost of building materials (such as lumber, steel, and concrete) and skilled labor has risen sharply in recent years, especially after pandemic-related disruptions. These elevated costs make new home construction less profitable or feasible for many builders, particularly for more affordable or smaller units, slowing overall supply growth even in areas open to development.
In recent years, environmental regulations have increased costs exponentially. Former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson told Just The News that not only are regulatory costs around a quarter of the budget, but for a new home, another $30,000 of the cost can be attributed to green energy requirements.
"So you can imagine, if you knocked off a quarter of the cost and a good portion of that $30,000, and you had interest rates that were reasonable, you suddenly open up the housing market enormously and the supply becomes more available, and people are willing to move from one house to another house, making the first house available. So this is imminently solvable," Carson noted.
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https://justthenews.com/government/white-house/trumps-housing-crisis-solution-updates-model-1946-2026