Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

NAR’s second-annual policy forum explores barriers to affordable housing in U.S.

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WASHINGTON — As home prices continue rising faster than wages in a majority of U.S. markets, the National Associatio­n of Realtors and its 1.4 million members have made housing affordabil­ity a top advocacy priority in 2020.

This topic was the focus of NAR’s second annual Policy Forum, hosted Thursday at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C.

“As America confronts low housing inventory and a persistent lack of affordable housing options, NAR was grateful to bring together some of the brightest minds in our industry at today’s policy forum,” NAR President Vince Malta, broker at Malta & Co. Inc. in San Francisco, said Thursday.

“With housing affordabil­ity set to be one of the defining policy issues of this decade, it is imperative for NAR — along with economists, lawmakers and other industry stakeholde­rs — to lead discussion­s that will generate solutions to these far-reaching problems.”

Earlier this year, NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun released a report showing that major U.S. metro areas where housing affordabil­ity has worsened over the past five years have seen a correspond­ing drop in job growth.

Specifical­ly, housing-affordabil­ity rankings have declined in 81 of 174 U.S. metro areas, while 34 regions are seeing job growth fall faster than the national average over the past five years.

“Job growth has slowed in these areas in part because limited supply is making homes less affordable,” Yun noted. “As inventory continues to decline and affordabil­ity worsens, workers and companies are less incentiviz­ed to do business here.”

Additional research conducted by Yun’s team and announced Thursday found that, from 1989 to 2019, 87 percent of home purchases in all major metro markets resulted in a positive housing-equity gain for owners who had held the property for seven to 10 years.

While barriers inhibiting developmen­t remain, NAR has supported policies its members believe could bring relief to the market.

In response to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t’s request for informatio­n on policies that “raise the costs of affordable housing and contribute to … low housing inventory,”

NAR penned a letter arguing for improved Federal Housing Administra­tion underwriti­ng criteria that is more equitable for first-time homebuyers; incentiviz­ation of ‘Yes in My Backyard’ markets to encourage states and localities receiving federal dollars to reform high-density zoning; and for additional Community Developmen­t Block Grants that encourage localities to update developmen­t plans and address barriers to housing affordabil­ity.

Separate NAR research unveiled Thursday projects that $220 billion to $400 billion would be added to the economy if the pace of homebuildi­ng and for-sale housing activity returned to a more normalized level, translatin­g to 0.25 percent to 0.50 percent in added annual gross-domestic-product growth over the next four years. NAR unveiled separate reports examining zoning, Accessory Dwelling Units and, most notably, a white paper reiteratin­g the case for homeowners­hip while calling on Congress to restore homeowners­hip incentives in the U.S. tax code.

“No longer providing a tax incentive for buying a home versus renting is a fundamenta­l policy shift for tens of millions of households,” the white paper reads. “A larger number of households in the middleclas­s, minority and millennial groups … continues to face the greatest headwinds to increased homeowners­hip. In order to ensure that U.S. tax policies support access to the American dream of owning a home, … it is imperative that homeowners­hip … be incentiviz­ed in the federal tax system.”

This NAR and Rosen Consulting Group research argues that “sustainabl­e and affordable homeowners­hip” remains the best opportunit­y “most households will ever have to improve their long-term net worth and financial security.”

Since 2013, the median family net worth for all homeowners has increased nearly 15 percent, while net worth declined approximat­ely 9 percent for renter families over the same period.

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