Monday, August 28, 2006

Read the whole thing, please...

I know clicking the link rarely happens in the Blogdom, but I strongly urge everyone to stop reading this and start reading this, a great story from the Washington Post about the growing housing affordability problem. The short summary: As the problem has grown to include more than just "poor" people, politicians seem even less concerned about it.

Here's more in the form of a chat transcript with the author.

2 comments:

Hayduke said...

We already do: Mortgage interest and other homeownership deductions to the tune of $130 billion a year.

Hayduke said...

What subsidies are you talking about? The article mentions only one federal housing program, HOPE VI, which isn't an individual subsidy but a grant program to cities to demolish and rebuild public housing projects.

As for total housing subsidies, the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the source of almost all the money for housing assistance, has an annual budget of less than $40 billion and annual spending on housing assistance at around $30 million. None of this money goes to people earning six figures. The primary targets of HUD assistance are people earning less than 50% of area median, considered very low income.

But affordability for very low income families is a different problem than affordability for middle class families, even though some of the definitions may be the same. Middle class families have market power, they just can't afford housing because the market is so out of whack. Very low income families little or no market power. For them, I don't think its about correcting the market as much is it is making sure they don't get left behind.

My taxes already support someone earning six figures: 75 percent of the mortgage interest deduction and other homeownership expenditures go to households earning more than $100,000.