Wednesday, 24 June 2015
Renters on the rise as US homeownership plunges to record lows
More Americans are renting their homes than at any time in more than two decades, as homeownership continues to plunge to record levels.
Those are the findings from new research out of Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Study. Continuing a decadelong decline, homeownership rates stood at just under 64 percent at the start of 2015 -- about the same level that prevailed in the early 1990s.
The gains of the nineties and early 2000s have been erased entirely. Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies
The unrelenting drop in homeownership “erases nearly all of the increase from the previous two decades,” said Chris Herbert, managing director of the housing center, in a statement. “The trend does not appear to be abating.”
Much of the decline in homeownership came from members of generation X, now in their late 30s to early 50s. Having hit their peak home-buying years in the throes of the financial crisis, gen-Xers lag significantly behind their elders in owning homes. Those aged 65 and over represent the only age group that has kept its homeownership rate relatively steady over the past decade.
As a result of muted homeownership, millions of adults are streaming into rental markets, sending vacancy rates to a 20-year low and driving up rents. Nationwide, rental costs increased 3.2 percent in 2014, double the rate of inflation.
All across the income spectrum, rent has grown into a significant burden: Overall, roughly half of American renters pay more than 30 percent of their income to landlords.
International Business Times
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