California Starts Were Fewest Ever in '08

It's official: Total housing production in California in 2008 slammed to the lowest level on record, according to the California Building Industry Association. Just 65,380 building permits were issued statewide last year for new homes, condominiums, townhouses and apartments, the trade group said. That's down 42 percent from 2007 and 69 percent -- 147,580 units - compared to 2004, the peak of the current cycle. Continuing the industry's siren call for help in bringing buyers back into the market, CBIA President Robert Rivinius said a temporary tax credit enacted in the 1970s during a similar downturn did the trick back then and could do so again. Just a few months after the credit was put in place, sales had increased by 100 percent, Mr. Rivinius said. And within two years, construction in the Golden State was back to normal levels. He also said the state's lagging economy is not likely to recover until homebuilding does. "Because homebuilding has declined so dramatically, California has lost nearly 300,000 jobs and $46 billion in economic impact in just the last three years, enough to plug the budget deficit and lift our economy out of the doldrums," he said. "New-housing construction creates jobs, generates revenue for state and local coffers and puts California back on the path to economic recovery."

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