Top Banner
A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities
23

A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

Mar 29, 2015

Download

Documents

Jorge Morss
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

A New Housing Policy:Imagine the Possibilities

Page 2: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

Rental HousingNot Housing of Last Resort

» 24 million households—more than 20 percent—call an apartment their home.

» Their numbers are growing.

» In 2006, Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies predicted an increase of 1.8 million renters by 2015. Instead, we saw a surge of 1.5 million renters from 2005 to 2007 alone.

Page 3: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

» In 2006, the federal government spent approximately $216 billion on housing programs and tax expenditures.

» 73 percent went to homeownership; just 27 percent went toward rental housing.

» We spend more on the deductions for mortgage interest and property tax than the combined federal spending on education, roads, mass transit and national parks.

The Homeownership Bias

Page 4: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

Housing Policy Disconnect

» America WANTS rental housing.

» America NEEDS rental housing.

» Renters are not Second-Class Citizens

» Tremendous opportunity to undo mistakes of the past.

Page 5: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

Growth = Choices and Opportunity

» The U.S. population is expected to increase 33% by 2030 to 376 million.

» That’s 94 million more people than there were in 2000.

» To accommodate that growth, we need 60 million new housing units.

Page 6: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

America Wants Rental Housing

Page 7: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

Future Housing Demand

» 78 million Echo Boomers getting ready to enter the housing market, almost universally as renters.

– By 2015, there will be 67 million people aged 20-34, in other words, people in their prime renter years.

» 10 million immigrants who will come to this country in the next 10 years.

Page 8: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

Build for New Choices

» For 50 years, families with children drove America’s housing industry.

» But married couples with children are projected to decline to just 1 in 4 households by 2025.

» By 2020, singles and unrelated individuals living together will comprise one out of every three households.

Page 9: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

Profound Housing Policy Disconnect

» Half of all new homes built between now and 2020 will have to be rental units.

» The U.S. will have a likely surplus of 22 million large-lot homes—that’s houses built on a sixth of an acre or more—by 2025.

» That's roughly 40 percent of the large-lot houses in existence today. Our housing policy has to be amended to reflect our changing preferences.

Page 10: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

America Needs Rental Housing

Page 11: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

Environmental Factors

» If we can shift 60 percent of new growth to compact, walkable neighborhoods—the kinds where apartments are found—we would save 85 million metric tons of carbon dioxide annually by 2030.

» Compact Development: – Preserves green space– Reduces damage to streams, lakes and rivers by

reducing the amount of paved surfaces – Reduces air pollution by reducing the need to

drive

Page 12: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

Infrastructure

» Sprawl is expensive!

Page 13: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

Make the Most of What We Have

» Compact development reduces infrastructure costs and saves money.

» Nationally, the U.S. can save over $100 billion in infrastructure costs over 25 years by growing compactly.

» Chicago can save $3.7 billion over 20 years by growing compactly.

Page 14: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

The Affordable Housing Shortage

» 35 million households spend 30 percent or more of their annual income on housing.

» 114 million people live in households that did not earn enough ($37,105) to reasonably afford a two-bedroom apartment.

Page 15: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

New Housing Policy Paradigm

Page 16: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

Change the Dialogue

» End the myths that apartments cause crime rates to spike and property values to plummet.

» Owners benefit from having rental housing in their communities.

Renters are Not Second-Class Citizens

Page 17: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

Change the Dialogue

» It costs $311 less a month, on average, to rent than to own.

» A $100 investment in housing in 1985 would be worth $270 today, while that same $100 placed in stocks would be worth $722—nearly two-and-a-half times as much.

Housing is Shelter, Not an Investment

Page 18: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

Change our Policy Paradigm

» Current incentives overwhelmingly benefit the wealthy and distort the economy by encouraging people to overinvest in housing.

» Large numbers of renters will not undo our society.

– Switzerland has a homeownership rate of 35 percent.

– Germany has a homeownership rate of 42 percent.

No New Homeownership Incentives

Page 19: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

Change the Regulatory Climate

» Zoning and land-use regulations that favor sprawling, car-dependent development.

» Federal, state and local policies should encourage the development of compact, sustainable housing located near transportation and employment centers.

Page 20: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

Change the Economic Climate

» Bridge the gap between construction costs and affordable rents.

www.nmhc.org/goto/workforcehousing

Page 21: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

Federal Incentives

» Fully fund and reform the Section 8 program.

» Fix the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit program.

» Enact Exit Tax Relief

Page 22: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

Imagine the Possibilities

Page 23: A New Housing Policy: Imagine the Possibilities. Rental Housing Not Housing of Last Resort »24 million householdsmore than 20 percentcall an apartment.

Douglas M. BibbyPresidentNational Multi Housing Council

Web Site: www.nmhc.org E-Mail: [email protected] Phone: 202/974-2300

Thank You