As our recently
released
2016 State of the Nation’s Housing report highlights, rental housing affordability
remains a pervasive—and growing—problem for millions of renter households in
the US. The number of renter households devoting more than half of their income
to housing costs (those considered severely burdened) climbed to a record high
of 11.4 million in 2014. Among renter households earning under $15,000 a year, severe
cost burdens are widespread, with 72 percent falling into this category. Severe
cost burdens can adversely impact the housing security of very low-income
households, leaving them little money left over to pay for necessities or to cover
unexpected expenses. Indeed, compared to those with similar incomes who live in
housing they can afford, very low-income renters paying more than half of their
income on housing in 2013 were nearly two times more likely to fall behind on
their rent, were at higher risk of having their utilities being shut off due to
nonpayment, and were more likely to believe that they would be evicted within
the next two months—all elements of housing insecurity
(Figure 1).
Notes: Very low-income refers to households with incomes no higher than 50% of area medians. Severely cost burdened refers to households that pay more than 50% of income for housing. Households with zero or negative income are assumed to be severely burdened. Rent payment(s) were missed within the previous three months. Felt under threat of eviction refers to households who reported that they were likely to be evicted within the next two months.
Source: JCHS tabulations of HUD, 2013 American Housing Survey.
Furthermore,
very low-income renter households with children are also more likely than those
without children to be housing insecure and believe that they are at risk for eviction
(Figure 2). Eviction is a leading
cause of homelessness for families with children living in major cities like Washington,
DC, Philadelphia and Baltimore, according to the most recent
US Conference of Mayors Hunger and Homelessness Survey. As I point out in a
previous
blog post, homelessness among people in families with children persists in the
highest-cost cities even as homelessness continues to decline steadily among veterans
and those with chronic patterns of homelessness.
Notes: Very low-income refers to households with incomes no higher than 50% of area medians. Severely cost burdened refers to households that pay more than 50% of income for housing. Households with zero or negative income are assumed to be severely burdened. Rent payment(s) were missed within the previous three months. Felt under threat of eviction refers to households who reported that they were likely to be evicted within the next two months. Households with children refer to any households headed by an adult aged 18 and over with at least one child (related or unrelated).
Source: JCHS tabulations of HUD, 2013 American Housing Survey.
Permanent federal
housing subsidies that account for changes in tenant incomes, such as housing
choice vouchers, have proven to be the
best option for improving housing stability, especially among homeless families
exiting shelter. However, spending on federal housing assistance remains
scarce, with direct housing subsidies representing just 4 percent of total discretionary
funding approved by Congress in FY2015, a share that has barely budged over the
past two decades.
Given the
scarcity of federal funding, how can we address financial instability among
low-income renters and reduce housing insecurity among this group? Enterprise recently
proposed a promising
master lease
model program with built-in tenant savings accounts that could, without
federal subsidies, improve the stability of low-income renters. Under this
program, rents would remain affordable because a nonprofit or mission-driven
organization would obtain long-term access to units in existing buildings
through a multi-year master lease arrangement with fixed prices similar to the
ones used for commercial leases. Unique to this model is a savings component in
which a small amount of money from a tenant’s monthly lease payment would be
allocated toward a custodial account in the tenant’s name. Tenants would not
only have stable housing costs but would also be able to accumulate a savings
cushion to pay for unanticipated expenses such as emergency room visits, and
bounce back from income disruptions such as involuntary job loss or a
significant reduction in income. In fact, a
recent
Urban Institute report analyzing data from the Census Bureau’s Survey of
Income and Program Participation panel found that low-income families with
savings of at least $2,000 to $4,999 are more financially resilient than
middle-income families without any savings. Among low-income families with
savings of $2,000–$4,999, just 20 percent experienced hardship after an income
disruption, compared to about 30 percent among middle-income families without
any savings.
However, financial
issues are not the only contributor to housing insecurity among low-income
households—some households may also struggle with additional challenges such as
domestic violence, former incarceration, and mental health and substance abuse
issues. As a result, improving housing insecurity may also require expanding
access to supportive services that help address these underlying issues.
The
MacArthur Foundation’s annual
How
Housing Matters Survey released last month confirms that a majority of
Americans have a grim outlook on housing affordability—81 percent of
respondents stated that they believe housing affordability is a problem in
America today. Nearly seven in ten adults responded that it is more challenging
to secure stable, affordable housing today than it was for previous
generations. Furthermore, a recent
Gallup
poll found that 63 percent of renters with annual household income of less
than $30,000 were worried about being able to pay their rent or other housing
costs. Existing proposals to
increase the number of affordable rentals built or preserved through the Low Income
Housing Tax Credit program, and to
reform
federal rental assistance programs in order to serve more low-income households,
can help alleviate the rental affordability crisis. However, it is equally
important to offer programs that can help low-income renters better weather
income disruptions or unexpected financial emergencies and avoid missed rent
payments that can lead to eviction.