I get what you're saying and it's a great point that plywood and dimensional lumber are basically only used for housing.
What I'm saying is that while metal isn't any more expensive (maybe 10% or so but that's inflation) there are only a few manufactures who turn metal into nails, screws, bolts, etc. I don't have any boxes handy but tomorrow I'll check and I suspect with the exception of specialty screws like Spax and StrongTie the rest are probably made in China. This would mean they're even more limited in supply right now than things like plywood which I believe is mainly created in the U.S. Power tools, especially the new brushless variety, all have ICs in them and I haven't seen any price spike or lack of availability. Other materials like fiberglass insulation, roofing shingles, tile, and cement all seem to be at about the same price as a few years ago. In short, I'm not seeing any other construction related price spike in build material or construction related products.
Last time I noticed, a lot of my plywood had Georgia-Pacific stamped on it. This is the same conglomerate that makes tons of paper products like toilet paper, paper towels, and printer paper. I haven't noticed big price spike in any of their other wood products. In my mind, that implies the price of wood or saw mill operation hasn't changed.
The price for housing in my area has spiked dramatically. Especially considering no one want to be a land lord right now with the eviction moratoriums and the absolute devastation of small business means plenty of property will be up for foreclosure in the near future. I can only assume this is funny money from wall street skewing the market. I think the same thing is happening with plywood and dimensional lumber. I don't know if you remember when wall street was doing it's with aluminium, but this make more sense than to me than a building boom.
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