Housing is now unaffordable for a record half of all U.S. renters, study finds

Neuromancer

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A Villa Straylight.
Over the past two years, Genuine Campbell was shocked at how rent for her two-bedroom apartment in Philadelphia just kept going up — from $1,300 a month to $1,600. She's a single mom of four, and right as her rent was rising, her hours as a hotel valet were getting cut.

Add in utility costs plus inflation, and every month brought a wrenching decision.

"Do you want to pay the bills and then give half the rent, or do you want to try to do the whole rent and then be back on bills?" she says.

Campbell says the area isn't even safe enough for her kids to play outside, but the rents are still way out of line with what she can make. "You have to work in, like, maybe a hospital or [as a] police officer ... just to keep up with the rent," she says.

In fact, more such households and many others also now struggle to pay rent, according to a newly released report from the Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University. It finds that in 2022, as rents spiked during the COVID-19 pandemic, a record half of U.S. renters paid more than 30% of their income for rent and utilities. Nearly half of those people were severely cost-burdened, paying more than 50% of their income.

"We actually saw increases across every single income category that we look at, which sort of surprised us," says Whitney Airgood-Obrycki, a senior research associate with the center and the report's lead author.

Since 2019, the biggest jump in unaffordability was for households making $30,000 to $74,999 a year. Even among those working full time, a third of all renters were still cost-burdened.

For renters making under $30,000 — who already faced the most severe struggle to afford housing — Airgood-Obrycki "didn't think it could possibly get that much higher." But the report found it did nudge up, to an all-time high of 83% who are cost-burdened. She says the amount of money they have left over for all other household expenses has plummeted by nearly half, to just $310 a month.

And she says the compromises people traditionally make to get cheaper rent aren't guaranteed these days.
So you might not be living in as good of a neighborhood. You might be commuting farther. You might be sacrificing the quality of your school system," Airgood-Obrycki says. "And often what we're seeing is that even when people are attempting to make these trade-offs, they still end up paying too much for housing."

As the Harvard report notes, U.S. homelessness rates hit a record high last year. The Biden administration and housing experts link that squarely to a severe housing shortage that has helped drive up prices.

 

CopiousX

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I feel like I've been hearing about how unaffordable housing is for the last 10 years. Have these folks made any kind of progress in addressing this :patrice:
Conflict of interest between the wealthy people funding politicians and their constituents. Nimby folks dont want multifamily housing . Neither do they want expanded public transit. The bankers that own the existing multifamily housing dont wanna lower the price of their housing stock. So the politicians wont move.

Only way to fix the overall problem is for the people to revolt to the extent that the wealth class backs down. Last time that occured was during occupy wallstreet more than a decade ago, and that effort basically fizzled out to nothingness. Ideally you would get a reaction similar to the outcry during the george floyd protests. But..


And there is a great deal of complacency in the american population relative to our foreign peers when it comes to this kinda stuff. So its unlikely such a thing will occur. The only folks worse than us are the east asian countries and the brittish in complacency. I garuntee you that the french would have already started burning cars and looting buildings under the same circumstances. Same could be said for our counterparts in latin america and the middle east.
 
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At30wecashout

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Conflict of interest between the wealthy people funding politicians and their constuents. Nimby folks dont want multifamily housing . Neither do they want expanded public transit. The bankers that own the existing multifamily housing dont wanna lower the price of their housing stock.

Only way to fix the overall problem is for the poeple to revolt. Last time tha toccured was occupy wallstreet more than a decasde ago, and theat effor basically fizzled out.
Bruh, I was young what that happened and with what I know now, that was a damn shame. I remember it happening and tbh, just anecdotally, anyone 30+ was on some "They need to get jobs" shyt if not right away, somewhere in the midst of it all. That sentiment really ramped up when the media started covering the degenerates of the group as they moved in rather than the level-headed protestors. Its a shame that shyt went nowhere.
 
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This is why they put preservatives and plastics in our food.

It kills your testosterone levels....less aggression....less likely to act out violently.

We are too divided on race, immigration, cultural stuff to unite poor/middle class versus rich. In a homogeneous country the fault line would be money. Here, it's everything BUT money.

Rich (white) people here don't have to look over their shoulders or worry at all. Jeff Bezos could drive a Bugatti Chiron with a bag full of cash into the worst hoods in Baltimore, Gary, Memphis, Houston etc., and nothing would happen. He wouldn't have to "check in." People would just stare and take pics.
 

At30wecashout

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:picard: Damn this country is crumbling. We needed Bernie or a Bernie like president, senator, house member, mayor, etc
Fixed. The only way to make meaningful change is to not put that shyt all on one person. We need grassroots local reform and national reforms. Leave the House and Judiciary the same as today but plop Bernie in and watch how much the monied folks stymie him, then we will have people bytching that he wasn't who they thought he was....even though they did not vote like-minded folks in to help him with his agenda.
 

TripleAgent

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Over the past two years, Genuine Campbell was shocked at how rent for her two-bedroom apartment in Philadelphia just kept going up — from $1,300 a month to $1,600. She's a single mom of four, and right as her rent was rising, her hours as a hotel valet were getting cut.

Add in utility costs plus inflation, and every month brought a wrenching decision.

"Do you want to pay the bills and then give half the rent, or do you want to try to do the whole rent and then be back on bills?" she says.

Campbell says the area isn't even safe enough for her kids to play outside, but the rents are still way out of line with what she can make. "You have to work in, like, maybe a hospital or [as a] police officer ... just to keep up with the rent," she says.

In fact, more such households and many others also now struggle to pay rent, according to a newly released report from the Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University. It finds that in 2022, as rents spiked during the COVID-19 pandemic, a record half of U.S. renters paid more than 30% of their income for rent and utilities. Nearly half of those people were severely cost-burdened, paying more than 50% of their income.

"We actually saw increases across every single income category that we look at, which sort of surprised us," says Whitney Airgood-Obrycki, a senior research associate with the center and the report's lead author.

Since 2019, the biggest jump in unaffordability was for households making $30,000 to $74,999 a year. Even among those working full time, a third of all renters were still cost-burdened.

For renters making under $30,000 — who already faced the most severe struggle to afford housing — Airgood-Obrycki "didn't think it could possibly get that much higher." But the report found it did nudge up, to an all-time high of 83% who are cost-burdened. She says the amount of money they have left over for all other household expenses has plummeted by nearly half, to just $310 a month.

And she says the compromises people traditionally make to get cheaper rent aren't guaranteed these days.
So you might not be living in as good of a neighborhood. You might be commuting farther. You might be sacrificing the quality of your school system," Airgood-Obrycki says. "And often what we're seeing is that even when people are attempting to make these trade-offs, they still end up paying too much for housing."

As the Harvard report notes, U.S. homelessness rates hit a record high last year. The Biden administration and housing experts link that squarely to a severe housing shortage that has helped drive up prices.


:francis: :beli: :hubie:
 
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