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Home Building At Slowest Pace Since 1991

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Published: September 18, 2008

WASHINGTON - Construction of new homes and apartments fell to the lowest level in 17 years last month, showing the country is still gripped by a severe housing downturn that has triggered billions of dollars of losses and is reshaping the structure of U.S. finance.

The Commerce Department reported Wednesday that housing construction dropped a surprising 6.2 percent last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 895,000 units. That's the slowest building pace since January 1991, another period when housing was going through a painful correction.

The decline is larger than the 1.6 percent drop analysts expected and showed weakness everywhere except the West.

The housing downturn has depressed overall economic activity and pushed the country close to a recession. Thousands of construction jobs have been lost, contributing to an economic slowdown that has pushed the overall unemployment rate to a five-year high of 6.1 percent in August.

There have been steep declines in home prices in much of the country. This has helped trigger record levels of mortgage defaults, dumping more homes on an already glutted market and further depressing prices. The billions of dollars of losses on mortgage investments have sent shockwaves through the country's financial sector, triggering the biggest restructuring on Wall Street since the Great Depression.

For August, the 6.2 percent drop in housing construction reflected a 1.9 percent decline in single-family construction, which fell to an annual rate of 630,000 units. Construction of multifamily units fell by 15.1 percent to an annual rate of 265,000 units.

Building activity was down in all parts of the country outside of the West. Construction fell by 14.5 percent in the Northeast and was down 13.6 percent in the Midwest and 7.4 percent in the South.

All the declines left construction activity 33.1 percent below the level of a year ago. Analysts believe that construction will continue falling for many more months as builders struggle to reduce the backlog of unsold new homes in a market that continues to slump.

Building permits, considered a good indicator of future activity, dropped 8.9 percent in August to an annual rate of 854,000 units.

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