On Feb. 19, the National Housing Conference’s Center for Housing Policy released its annual Housing Landscape report entitled, “The Housing Affordability Challenges of America’s Working Households.” In summarizing the affordable housing challenges of low- and moderate-income working households, the report found that these households have greater affordability challenges than the overall population.
According to the report, working renters have faced steadily rising housing costs since 2009. The foreclosure crisis in the U.S. turned many foreclosed homeowners into renters and limited credit availability, preventing many would-be homebuyers from transitioning into homeownership. These factors have driven up demand and prices for a constrained supply of rental housing. The report also found that while working renter incomes outpaced rising rents between 2009 and 2012, there are still 5.9 million working renter households that are severely cost burdened.
In addition, there’s no guarantee that wages will continue to rise faster than rents in this weak economic recovery. Unless the availability of affordable rental housing increases, it will be difficult to make additional progress in reducing the number of severely cost-burdened working households.
Some other highlights of the report include: