Business

Biden’s infrastructure plan does not come close to tackling the vast extent of America’s new housing crisis

Housing crisis homeless camp Philadelphia
Activists outside a homeless camp in Philadelphia on September 9, 2020.

  • The pandemic has exacerbated the existing housing crisis, and Biden’s plan does not go far enough.
  • There is no safety net for housing, making any assistance during economic recessions difficult to deliver.
  • The crisis was built by poor government policy. The current administration must take steps to ensure housing as a basic human right.
  • Lindsay Owens is the interim Executive Director of the Groundwork Collaborative.
  • Sammi Aibinder is Special Assistant at the Groundwork Collaborative.
  • This is an opinion column. The thoughts expressed are those of the authors.
  • See more stories on Insider’s business page.

The spending plans that the Biden administration released this week laid out substantial investments into our nation’s housing system, including $213 billion for building and retrofitting affordable housing units, $40 billion for public housing capital repairs, and grant funding to address zoning laws rooted in racial and economic exclusion. These proposals are a welcome first step to ensuring safe, affordable, sustainable shelter – and Congress should move swiftly to enact them – but they do not come close to meeting the scale of the housing crisis that has been underway in the United States for decades.

The reality is that although the failures in our housing system were exacerbated by the pandemic – to the tune of 10 million people at risk of eviction and more than $57 billion owed in back rent – the pandemic didn’t cause them. Rents have been soaring for decades, consuming an ever larger share of the incomes of the lowest-income Americans (and during the pandemic, the divergence in rent for low-income tenants versus higher-income tenants has worsened).

While renter incomes grew by 0.5% from 2001 to 2018, rents increased by 13%. Median asking rent has more than doubled over the last 20 years, and in 95% of counties, a full-time minimum-wage worker cannot afford to rent a one-bedroom apartment. Black and brown people are particularly vulnerable to the extreme instability renters face. With a housing market this fragile during boom times, Americans never stood a chance when a crisis inevitably hit.

No housing safety net

It doesn’t have to be this way. The economic impact of recessions, such as job losses and income declines, are largely predictable, and policymakers have put in place a number of programs to offset them. When Americans lose their jobs, they can apply for unemployment insurance; when their income and assets drop below a certain threshold, they qualify for nutritional assistance.

But when it comes to housing, there’s no comparable safety net. The federal government currently offers no guaranteed form of housing assistance, and there are no countercyclical housing programs that expand during downturns or are triggered by economic indicators. This makes it almost impossible to quickly and effectively deliver any assistance that Congress does allocate during a disaster like this one. Variations in application and eligibility requirements across states and cities have led to backlogs in distribution of federal aid money, all while thousands upon thousands of applicants have been denied assistance.

The fragility of our housing market is not an accident; policy choices have led to a two-tiered housing market in which relatively well-off, mostly white consumers can achieve the American dream of homeownership – with the help of considerable federal subsidies like the mortgage interest tax deduction – while renters, who are disproportionately Black, brown, and low-income, transfer an increasingly large share of their income to landlords in the private market. Ultimately, the scarcity of affordable and accessible housing in our economy is not reflective of national resources – it is reflective of a centuries-long political debate about who is deserving of public investment, and therefore economic dignity and security.

Consider the federal budget for housing programs geared toward those with the lowest incomes. Federal spending on housing assistance relative to gross domestic product has fallen by 30% since the mid-1990s. Funding for public housing in particular has suffered profound losses: in the last 20 years the annual federal budget has only met operations needs for public housing across the country three times. On top of that, funding for repairs has been cut in half – a trend that can’t be divorced from the long-standing political tradition of pathologizing poor and low-income Black communities. This continued disinvestment has resulted in the share of households receiving housing assistance declining to just one in five today. As the rental affordability crisis has worsened, the federal response has shrunk.

Meanwhile, recent estimates have shown that more than two-thirds of the government’s total spending on housing is allocated toward subsidizing homeowners through tax deductions. The vast majority of benefits from this “entitlement” go to the wealthiest of households, and most Black and brown families are excluded entirely. By structuring housing policy and housing markets so that Americans’ homes are their most valuable asset and source of equity, this country has essentially transferred safety net functions to private homeowners (and enabled white families to maintain wealth by passing down the homes they own over generations).

Calling on the Biden administration

Our government can make different choices. Housing policies that rely on the private market to develop, administer, or maintain housing stock for those who are housing insecure have not come close to meeting the need for millions of people, because genuinely affordable housing is not profitable. If the Biden administration wants to truly “Build Back Better” and deliver on the promise of stable housing for all, it must commit to massive, sustained public investments, and a significant shift in our narrative around who is deserving of those investments.

There is no one silver-bullet solution: a number of approaches must be taken at the federal, state, and local levels (both regulatory and budgetary) to put us on the path toward an equitable and resilient housing system. Experts across the field, including grassroots leaders, researchers, and policymakers, have laid out extensive agendas for these actions. The Biden campaign previously committed to fully funding rental assistance for all who qualify – another important start, but one that does not adequately address permanent solutions to housing unaffordability.

In addition to advancing legislation that, at an absolute minimum, meets the Biden administration’s priorities for housing, Congress must move to repeal the Faircloth Amendment, which has prohibited any increase to public housing stock since its passage over 20 years ago. Congress and the White House must also enact policies and fund programs that prioritize rehabilitation and preservation – not demolition – of homes in disinvested neighborhoods. Keeping new and revitalized homes affordable will also mean a strong commitment to rent control policies that place strict limits on rent increases, as well as exploration of alternative social and collective ownership models that empower tenants and grant them the dignity and security of stable housing.

The path forward isn’t easy, but the lessons from history are clear. We are long past due for a major course correction in our federal housing policy: not just to patch things up in case of emergency, but to remedy longstanding inequities and recognize shelter as a basic right in the wealthiest country in the world.

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