Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Study: High housing costs mean less for essentials

Millennial­s, Gen X face student loans, child care costs

- By Karen D’Souza The Mercury News

We’re looking for the right people for the following positions: A new study shows 62% of renters and 47% of owners struggle with housing costs.

“The cost of housing is having a significan­t impact on households of every age, size and location.”

— David Brickman, president and incoming CEO, Freddie Mac

SAN JOSE, Calif. — More than a third of Americans have been forced to cut spending on essential items like food and utilities to afford housing, according to a Freddie Mac study.

About 42% of renters and 33% of homeowners have had to reduce the money spent on essentials to cover the cost of housing during the prior two years, the report said. Overall, 62% of renters and 47% of owners reported struggling to afford housing.

“Affordabil­ity remains the essential factor when it comes to determinin­g whether to rent or purchase a home, and the cost of housing is having a significan­t impact on households of every age, size and location,” said David Brickman, president and incoming CEO of Freddie Mac, as Yahoo reports.

“For millennial­s and many Gen Xers, buying a home is no longer just a decision based on housing and housing costs — increasing pressure from student loans and the rising cost of child care are having a significan­t impact,” he said.

Freddie Mac conducted the online survey over a four-day period. The poll collected data from 4,040 respondent­s over the age of 18, including 2,864 homeowners, 1,119 renters and 57 others.

“While we tend to focus primarily on wages not keeping up with house prices and mispercept­ions of down payments, we should also recognize that for many millennial­s and Gen Xers, the basic cost of living has gone up,” said Brickman. “Heavy burdens from student loans and the rapidly rising cost of child care are clearly affecting the housing decisions of these individual­s.”

Student debt has more than doubled over the past decade to more than $1.6 trillion, according to the Federal Reserve. Of millennial­s who rent, 51% said they based their choice of housing on their student loan payments.

The cost of child care has also risen over the past 30 years, according to the report. About 31% of renters and 45% of homeowners reported choosing cheaper housing to afford day care, according to Freddie Mac.

More than half of workers employed in such vital positions as health care, education and law enforcemen­t have made housing decisions with their student loan repayment obligation­s in mind, the report noted.

About 35% of home owners who reported trouble affording housing in the last two years had to move to find a more affordable place to live, a 9% increase since last August.

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MATIAS J. OCNER/MIAMI HERALD

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