'Glut of Overpriced Apartments' Has Made Rents Fall for Rich, Soar for Poor in Cities Nationwide
As expensive U.S. cities welcome “a boom in luxury housing construction,” rents are falling for rich residents while rising for working-class people who seek affordable housing, according to the Washington Post.
“Since last summer, rents have fallen for the highest earners while increasing for the poorest in San Francisco, Atlanta, Nashville, Chicago, Philadelphia, Denver, Pittsburgh, Portland, and Washington, D.C., among other cities,” Jeff Stein reports for the Post, citing Zillow data.
Overall, rents for the poor have increased by 18 percent since 2011, but in some cities, it’s been far higher. San Fransisco, for example, has seen rents for low-income residents spike by nearly 50 percent, while Portland rents rose by more than 40 percent during that same period.
“For-profit developers have predominantly built for the luxury and higher end of the market, leaving a glut of overpriced apartments in some cities. Some decision-makers believed this would ‘filter down’ to the lowest income people, but it clearly will not meet their needs.”
—Diane Yentel, NLIHCDiane Yentel, president and chief executive of the advocacy group National Low Income Housing Coalition (NLIHC), outlined the governing theory that has led to this nationwide crisis.
“For-profit developers have predominantly built for the luxury and higher end of the market, leaving a glut of overpriced apartments in some cities,” she explained. “Some decision-makers believed this would ‘filter down’ to the lowest income people, but it clearly will not meet their needs.”
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