Some four years ago, people were talking about the possibility of New York City being dead. But of course that was nonsense. Last week, New York City published the initial findings of its housing and vacancy survey and the key takeaway is that the city's vacancy rate dropped to 1.41% last year (2023). This is a drop from 4.54% just two years ago and the lowest measurement since 1968. It's also even worse at more affordable rent levels:
The problem, as described by the city, is a supply-demand imbalance. Over the last two years, the city's net housing stock grew by about 60,000 homes (~2%). This is, apparently, pretty good compared to recent years/decades; but it wasn't nearly enough given that the city added 275,000 new households. This is the opposite of dead, and it's not going to be addressed by just doing things like restricting short-term rentals.
We have a structural delivery problem and New York City is not alone in facing it.
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