From HousingWire, by Megan Hopkins
http://www.housingwire.com/rewired/2012/12/31/small-housing-inventory-may-push-rental-demand-years
The
next 10 years may bring five to six million new renter households. Or
at least that’s what a recent infographic by the Bipartisan Policy
Center is saying. So in the midst of a recovering housing market, why
the shift toward a rise in rentals?
Although housing starts are
up, construction will take some time to complete and the low inventory
of houses may push many potential homeowners to consider renting.
“There
is clearly an unmet demand for homeownership among young households,”
Barry Zigas, director of Housing Policy for Consumer Federation of
America, told HousingWire. “Those households are running up against a
number of constraints.”
Factors such as tighter credit, larger
down payments and decreased income with the rising generation will all
play into the increase in renters in the years ahead.
“Credit for
homeownership borrowing will likely be tighter and potentially more
expensive, relative to earlier times,” Zigas said. “Families will likely
have less wealth because the rising generation is starting with less
wealth. If down payments are at any significant level, it will be a
barrier to acquiring a home for longer than may have been the case in
the past.”
There are several key groups that will be the driving
force behind the rental demand, according to the below infographic. The
growing number of seniors looking to downsize their homes, the young
adults moving out on their own yet not ready for homeownership, the
post-foreclosure homeowners and the growing number of immigrants in the
U.S. will all play a significant role in the rising rental remand.
“We
expect to see an increase in household formation and for a variety of
reasons that household formation is likely to be more heavily
concentrated among renters and households who are likely to be renters
for somewhat longer than was the case for the last 20 years,” Zigas
said.
CLICK ON THE PHOTO TO SEE THE WHOLE INFOGRAPHIC:
Tuesday, January 8, 2013
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