The American forest industry is facing its last chance to lead—or fade into irrelevance.
Housing construction has stalled. Mills are closing. The logging workforce is aging out with no replacements. Industry leaders keep waiting for interest rates to drop and markets to recover, convinced this is just another cyclical downturn.
They're wrong.
Empty Homes & Silent Saws reveals the structural forces reshaping the forest products demographic collapse that will permanently reduce housing demand, an affordability crisis that prevents family formation, multi-generational housing that shrinks per-capita lumber consumption, and immigration restriction that eliminates the population growth the industry has counted on for decades.
But this isn't a book about inevitable decline. It's about choice.
Zachary Lowry argues that the forest industry stands at a crossroads. One path leads to decline, rent-seeking, and irrelevance. The other leads to genuine leadership—advocating for policies that expand housing construction, align industry interests with America's interests, and rebuild sustainable markets.
Drawing on economic analysis, demographic data, and firsthand experience in forestry operations from Maine to Mexico, Lowry connects birth rates to lumber demand, bailouts to industry dysfunction, and housing policy to the survival of rural communities.
The transformation is coming. The only question is what the industry will do about it.
For forestry professionals, landowners, policymakers, and anyone concerned about housing affordability and rural America's future.