1 / 17

Welcome to...

Welcome to. Companion PowerPoint Presentation for the Introduction to Housing textbook. Housing Affordability. Lack of affordable housing is a crisis for both communities & individual households For communities—attracting & keeping employment opportunities; quality neighborhoods

jovianne
Download Presentation

Welcome to...

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Welcome to... Companion PowerPoint Presentation for the Introduction to Housing textbook

  2. Housing Affordability

  3. Lack of affordable housing is a crisis for both communities & individual households • For communities—attracting & keeping employment opportunities; quality neighborhoods • For households—self-sufficiency, stability & improves life outcomes for children There is debate on this issue

  4. When is Housing Affordable? • A household should spend no more than 30% of its total income on housing costs, including mortgage or rent payments & utilities • More than 30%: housing cost burdened • More than 50%: severely housing cost burdened • Variety of housing affordability indices exist

  5. 13.4 million renter households & 14.5 million owner households have housing affordability problems Factors influencing affordability: • Income level • Household size • Geographic variation Affordability is tied to a particular geographic area’s median household income & median housing costs

  6. Households and Housing Costs • Median cost of a new single-family home: 1982 $60,300 2002 $187,500 Increase of 170% • Due to: Inflation Increases in cost of materials & labor Increase in land values Regulations & development charges Households’ demands for more space of higher quality

  7. Homeownership and Affordability • Affordability index: relationship between the median income in an area and the median income required to quality for a mortgage • 100 = households with median income could purchase the median priced home • In 2002: 136.4 • But minority, single-parent & low-income households face greater affordability problems

  8. Renting and Affordability • Poor households that rent suffer the most severe housing cost burdens • Supply of low-cost rental housing units has not been sufficient for the demand • Much of that housing is old & located in neighborhoods with little access to jobs & adequate services • Government assistance is available, but is not adequate

  9. Understanding the Shortage Increasing the cost of housing: Additional space & amenities Compared to 20 years ago homes are: • Larger • Have more bedrooms (3-4) • Have more bathrooms (2 ½) • Have at least a two-car garage • But, smaller lot

  10. Increasing the cost of housing: The role of local government regulations Increased government regulation leads to higher housing costs & decreased amounts of new construction • Impact fees • Code restrictions • Growth restrictions • Exclusionary zoning

  11. Increasing the cost of housing: Failure to preserve existing affordable housing • Loss of affordable units to gentrification • Loss of units due to lack of repairs • Too expensive to rehabilitate units under new codes, so are demolished or left to decay

  12. Homelessness • For some families, a failure to find affordable housing leads to homelessness • Homeless—those in shelters or in a public or private place not designed for, or ordinarily used as, a regular sleeping accommodation for people (800,000 each night) • Hidden homeless—living with relatives or friends (doubled up) in overcrowded conditions or living in substandard housing

  13. Who are the homeless? • Families with children (fastest growing segment) • Single adults, often men 30-50; but many women as well • Runaway youths • Suffer from mentall illness • Struggle with substance abuse

  14. Need affordable housing— rental assistance • Need to earn a sufficient wage— living wage • Shelters (day and/or night) • Temporary assistance through nonprofits

  15. Solving the Affordability Problem • Public education efforts—the public must support the need for affordable housing and be willing to provide the necessary support • Land use strategies to reduce the cost of housing --higher density & mixed-use development --inclusionary zoning --Community Land Trust (CLT)

  16. Reduction in building & management costs --streamlined building methods & standardized components --factory-built housing --donated labor & materials --resident labor (sweat equity) • Reduction in finance costs --low-interest loans for constructing or rehabilitating affordable housing --Low Income Housing Tax Credit --HOME & CDBG

  17. Increase resources for housing --to builders to produce affordable housing --home purchase assistance to low- & moderate-income homebuyers --Public Housing & Section 8 vouchers to renters

More Related