国产视频

In Short

Asset Building News Week – July 29, 2016

Highlights from this week's news stories

housing construction

Featured Story: Why Can鈥檛 We Build More Affordable Housing?

鈥淔or every 100 extremely low-income households,鈥 according to recent research by the Urban Institute and the National Housing Conference (NHC), 鈥渢here are only 29 adequate, affordable, and available rental units.鈥 How can this be? As writes in the Washington Post, 鈥渢he costs of building [affordable housing] outstrip[s] what the people who may live in them could afford to pay in rent.鈥

Those costs include the price of the land itself, paying the architects, engineers, and construction workers who design and build the buildings, and maintenance costs (just to name a few). Covering these costs ultimately adds to the final sticker price that those who buy or rent will have to pay鈥攁 price that those making below the median income of a particular area can rarely afford. Urban and NHC recently released an that allows people to adjust the costs to see if they can break even.

鈥淓ven if you could build an entire property for free, an apartment meant for extremely low-income renters (those making 30 percent of area median income or less) probably wouldn’t work at the end of the day. Those apartments could still cost more to maintain over time than the families living in them would yield in rent,鈥 says Badger.

Badger writes that the 鈥渂ottom line鈥 solution to this issue, according to Urban and NHC, is that the government simply needs to provide more affordable housing subsidies. expands on this in Bloomberg, stating that an issue is that low-income housing tax credits are typically used on housing for higher-wage earners instead of those that need affordable housing most. Additional public funding, then, is needed. Other solutions that Clark notes include 鈥渇iltering,鈥 which occurs when more luxury housing is built, which then frees up 鈥渙lder, lesser-quality units鈥 to become affordable housing units. He also mentions new legislation that would 鈥渓et developers tap rental vouchers to fund new projects,鈥 in addition to 鈥渕echanisms by which local governments give builders publicly-owned land or development rights in exchange for a promise to build affordable units.鈥 For their part, in the Los Angeles Times point to a new law in California that would allow homeowners to build secondary units in their backyards, potentially creating thousands of new homes.

Clearly, access to affordable housing will continue to be an issue in the coming years. CityLab鈥檚 explains why Democrats and Republicans need to make it a priority, including in the presidential campaigns because 鈥渞oughly one in five Americans lists housing as an issue on par with immigration, taxes, and entitlements reform.鈥

News Highlights: Millennial Savings Habits and SNAP Asset Limits

鈥淔or the first time in nearly 40 years, federal regulators are preparing to significantly strengthen the rules that govern debt collection in an effort to clamp down on collectors who hound consumers for debts they may not even owe,鈥 reports the New York Times鈥檚 Stacy Cowley. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau鈥檚 (CFPB) to reign in the debt collection agencies comes at the heels of its proposal to curb the abuses of the payday loan industry. The CFPB is considering rules that would require debt collection companies will have to more fully document the debt they are trying to collect, make it clear how a consumer can dispute the debt, and observe state statutes of limitations that bar them from legally pursuing older debt.鈥

In the 国产视频 Weekly, Kalena Thomhave provides some context to the news that 62 percent of Millennials save at least five percent of their incomes. She argues that it鈥檚 not all about Millennials 鈥渢aking up more responsibility鈥濃擬illennials are forced to save because of the changing nature of work. As employers shift away from providing benefits to reduce costs, workers can no longer rely on their employers to provide them with retirement security and health insurance. Those Millennials that do save likely have strong financial support from their families, which reduces their expenses and makes saving easier. Thomhave notes that the Millennials that receive financial assistance from their families are likely to be white and middle- to upper-class. So, 鈥渋nstead of shifting the story to make it about greater 鈥榬esponsibility,鈥 we should be promoting policy solutions that aim to make saving as well as financial stability more accessible for everyone.鈥 She recommends portable benefits, increasing access to flexible saving, and expanding the Earned Income Tax Credit and the Child Tax Credit as ways to facilitate saving and better wealth and income equality for all generations.

The Urban Institute鈥檚 new brief on the effects of asset limits in public assistance programs on financial inclusion confirms what we have said to be true for some time: asset limits in public benefits programs curb a household鈥檚 ability to build savings and participate in mainstream financial institutions. According to Urban鈥檚 report, 鈥淸r]elaxing Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) asset limits…increases low-income households鈥 savings…and participation in mainstream financial markets…; it also reduces SNAP churn…. [R]elaxed asset limits [would] increase households鈥 financial security and stability by increasing savings and reducing benefit fluctuations, and they can decrease administrative program costs when fewer people cycle on and off the program.鈥

#WeSaidItFirst

News in Brief: Debt-free College Tuition, Minimum Wage, the Gender Pay Gap, and More

  • writes for the Huffington Post on how waiving tuition isn鈥檛 always enough to ease students鈥 debt burdens, because 鈥渋f you鈥檙e going to a public college, tuition is only one part of your financial worries.鈥
  • 鈥淟ong-term unemployment isn’t a story about bad personal motivation. It’s a story about bad macroeconomic luck,鈥 says in the Washington Post.
  • , co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, put together a report for the Century Foundation on the potential of financial transaction taxes to both rein the financial sector and raise revenue to defray the costs of higher education.
  • The Washington Post鈥檚 reports on the run-up to the first Fight for $15 convention set to take place mid-August in Richmond, VA.
  • 鈥淲hether or not a person stays in jail before going to trial often affects the outcome of his or her case,鈥 writes the听础迟濒补苍迟颈肠鈥檚 . Not only does it affect the outcome of a case, it also impacts a person鈥檚 ability to find a job, secure a home, and get a variety of public benefits.
  • Writing in the Hill, covers the sorry state of American鈥檚 retirement savings and the steps the Department of Labor is taking to improve the financial future of retirees, he argues that cities (and not just states) should be allowed to develop 鈥淪ecure Choice鈥 style retirement savings systems. 聽
  • Retired Microsoft executive says raising the minimum wage doesn鈥檛 matter in an op-ed for the聽Hill. The Manhattan Institute鈥檚 argues that a $15 federal minimum wage 鈥渨ould replace a system that tailors policy to local conditions with a system that imposes a single standard from America鈥檚 most prosperous cities on less affluent areas that can ill afford it.鈥
  • In light of Hillary Clinton鈥檚 proposal for paid family leave and affordable childcare, 厂濒补迟别鈥檚 outlines the waves of support the platform has received over the years.
  • Writing for the Atlantic, discusses a new from the Economic Policy Institute that says part of the gender wage gap can be explained by social and cultural factors that influence women’s job choices.

Events

| Brookings Institution | August 4, 2016

| The Shriver Center on Poverty Law | August 18, 2016

More 国产视频 the Authors

Kalena Thomave
Kalena Thomhave

Emerson National Hunger Fellow, Family-Centered Social Policy Program

Sade Bruce

Programs/Projects/Initiatives

Asset Building News Week – July 29, 2016