The Denver Post

Dream of buying a home gets harder for U.S. single mothers

- By Tara Siegel Bernard

Karlet Hewitt decided to make major lifestyle changes after experienci­ng the shocks of the pandemic: the income hit, the confinemen­t, the view of the padlocked park through her thirdfloor apartment window. In February, Hewitt — a single mother to a 9-year-old boy — left Mount Vernon, N.Y., and headed south.

“The goal for me was to buy a home in North Carolina because it was a better market,” she said.

But Hewitt burned through a lot of her savings as she refocused her event planning business on virtual gatherings, all while home prices shot up.

“Now,” she said, “how does one even entertain this?”

Even without the benefit of a second earner, single mothers — those who have never married — have made up a growing share of home buyers over the past three decades. Although they still lag behind single fathers and married couples, one-quarter of single mothers were homeowners in 2019 — about double the rate in 1990, according to a recent report from the Urban Institute.

But the pandemic threatens to dampen that progress, experts said. Women have borne the brunt of the job losses over the past year and a half, while also shoulderin­g most of the child care responsibi­lities — an acute challenge for single mothers, especially those with young children. At the same time, the housing market has grown highly competitiv­e: Prices of singlefami­ly homes rose nearly 20% in

August, the most recent data available, from a year earlier, according to S&P Corelogic Caseshille­r’s National Home Price Index.

“COVID was definitely harder on some households, especially single women with children,”

said Jun Zhu, a co-author of the Urban Institute report and a clinical assistant professor with the Finance Department at Indiana University. “It is possible the pandemic can undo that progress.”

Homeowners­hip often is viewed as a sign of financial stability, with good reason: It ensures that housing costs remain predictabl­e even as rents and inflation rise. And although homeowners­hip is not risk-free, it generally provides a growing store of wealth that can be tapped later or passed on to the next generation.

“Homeowners­hip is an extremely important part of people’s savings and wealth accumulati­on, especially for middle-income or median households,” said Kelly Shue, a professor of finance at the Yale School of Management.

Shue analyzed government survey data from 1989 through 2016 and found that, among households with median savings, homes accounted for 70% of single women’s wealth near retirement, compared with 50% for single men and about 60% for married couples.

“It’s important for all groups but especially for single women,” she said.

The pandemic, combined with the challengin­g market landscape, has eroded women’s confidence about their likelihood of becoming homeowners. Nearly 60% of single female heads of households who rent — those who never married, those who are separated or divorced, and widows — said they could not afford to buy and did not know if they ever would, according to a September study by Freddie Mac, the government-backed mortgage giant.

“It is really hard,” said Hewitt, 33, who said her events business was still struggling to regain its

 ?? Eamon Queeny, © The New York Times Co. ?? Karlet Hewitt moved from New York with hopes of buying a home in Raleigh, N.C. Lost pay during the pandemic and high costs threaten the strides single mothers have made in homeowners­hip, often a key driver of long-term wealth.
Eamon Queeny, © The New York Times Co. Karlet Hewitt moved from New York with hopes of buying a home in Raleigh, N.C. Lost pay during the pandemic and high costs threaten the strides single mothers have made in homeowners­hip, often a key driver of long-term wealth.
 ?? Desiree Rios, © The New York Times Co. ?? Taylor Hurles, a single mother of two young boys in the Bronx, had been looking into programs for first-time home buyers when she lost her income in the pandemic.
Desiree Rios, © The New York Times Co. Taylor Hurles, a single mother of two young boys in the Bronx, had been looking into programs for first-time home buyers when she lost her income in the pandemic.

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