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Is Universal Rent Assistance a Solution to Housing Crisis?

July 8, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

Thousands of American families that can’t find affordable apartments are stuck living in extended-stay motels.
Thousands of American families that can’t find affordable apartments are stuck living in extended-stay motels. (Michael S. Williamson/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

By Alex Schwartz and Kirk McClure

If there’s one thing that U.S. politicians and activists from across the political spectrum can agree on, it’s that rents are far too high.

Many experts believe that this crisis is fueled by a shortage of housing, caused principally by restrictive regulations.

Rents and home prices would fall, the argument goes, if rules such as minimum lot- and house-size requirements and prohibitions against apartment complexes were relaxed. This, in turn, would make it easier to build more housing.

As experts on housing policy, we’re concerned about housing affordability. But our research shows little connection between a shortfall of housing and rental affordability problems. Even a massive infusion of new housing would not shrink housing costs enough to solve the crisis, as rents would likely remain out of reach for many households.

However, there are already subsidies in place that ensure that some renters in the U.S. pay no more than 30% of their income on housing costs. The most effective solution, in our view, is to make these subsidies much more widely available.

A financial sinkhole

Just how expensive are rents in the U.S.?

According to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, a household that spends more than 30% of its income on housing is deemed to be cost-burdened. If it spends more than 50%, it’s considered severely burdened. In 2023, 54% of all renters spent more than 30% of their pretax income on housing. That’s up from 43% of renters in 1999. And 28% of all renters spent more than half their income on housing in 2023.

Renters with low incomes are especially unlikely to afford their housing: 81% of renters making less than $30,000 spent more than 30% of their income on housing, and 60% spent more than 50%.

Estimates of the nation’s housing shortage vary widely, reaching up to 20 million units, depending on analytic approach and the time period covered. Yet our research, which compares growth in the housing stock from 2000 to the present, finds no evidence of an overall shortage of housing units. Rather, we see a gap between the number of low-income households and the number of affordable housing units available to them; more affluent renters face no such shortage. This is true in the nation as a whole and in nearly all large and small metropolitan areas.

Would lower rents help? Certainly. But they wouldn’t fix everything.

We ran a simulation to test an admittedly unlikely scenario: What if rents dropped 25% across the board? We found it would reduce the number of cost-burdened renters – but not by as much as you might think.

Even with the reduction, nearly one-third of all renters would still spend more than 30% of their income on housing. Moreover, reducing rents would help affluent renters much more than those with lower incomes – the households that face the most severe affordability challenges.

The proportion of cost-burdened renters earning more than $75,000 would fall from 16% to 4%, while the share of similarly burdened renters earning less than $15,000 would drop from 89% to just 80%. Even with a rent rollback of 25%, the majority of renters earning less than $30,000 would remain cost-burdened.

Vouchers offer more breathing room

Meanwhile, there’s a proven way of making housing more affordable: rental subsidies.

In 2024, the U.S. provided what are known as “deep” housing subsidies to about 5 million households, meaning that rent payments are capped at 30% of their income.

These subsidies take three forms: Housing Choice Vouchers that enable people to rent homes in the private market; public housing; and project-based rental assistance, in which the federal government subsidizes the rents for all or some of the units in properties under private and nonprofit ownership.

The number of households participating in these three programs has increased by less than 2% since 2014, and they constitute only 25% of all eligible households. Households earning less than 50% of their area’s median family income are eligible for rental assistance. But unlike Social Security, Medicare or food stamps, rental assistance is not an entitlement available to all who qualify. The number of recipients is limited by the amount of funding appropriated each year by Congress, and this funding has never been sufficient to meet the need.

By expanding rental assistance to all eligible low-income households, the government could make huge headway in solving the rental affordability crisis. The most obvious option would be to expand the existing Housing Choice Voucher program, also known as Section 8.

The program helps pay the rent up to a specified “payment standard” determined by each local public housing authority, which can set this standard at between 80% and 120% of the HUD-designated fair market rent. To be eligible for the program, units must also satisfy HUD’s physical quality standards.

Unfortunately, about 43% of voucher recipients are unable to use it. They are either unable to find an apartment that rents for less than the payment standard, meets the physical quality standard, or has a landlord willing to accept vouchers.

Renters are more likely to find housing using vouchers in cities and states where it’s illegal for landlords to discriminate against voucher holders. Programs that provide housing counseling and landlord outreach and support have also improved outcomes for voucher recipients.

However, it might be more effective to forgo the voucher program altogether and simply give eligible households cash to cover their housing costs. The Philadelphia Housing Authority is currently testing out this approach.

The idea is that landlords would be less likely to reject applicants receiving government support if the bureaucratic hurdles were eliminated. The downside of this approach is that it would not prevent landlords from renting out deficient units that the voucher program would normally reject.

Homeowners get subsidies – why not renters?

Expanding rental assistance to all eligible low-income households would be costly.

The Urban Institute, a nonpartisan think tank, estimates it would cost about $118 billion a year.

However, Congress has spent similar sums on housing subsidies before. But they involve tax breaks for homeowners, not low-income renters. Congress forgoes billions of dollars annually in tax revenue it would otherwise collect were it not for tax deductions, credits, exclusions and exemptions. These are known as tax expenditures. A tax not collected is equivalent to a subsidy payment.

Silhouette of older man standing at sliding glass door.
Only about 25% of eligiblge households receive rental assistance from the federal government.
Luis Sinco/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

For example, from 1998 through 2017 – prior to the tax changes enacted by the first Trump administration in 2017 – the federal government annually sacrificed $187 billion on average, after inflation, in revenue due to mortgage interest deductions, deductions for state and local taxes, and for the exemption of proceeds from the sale of one’s home from capital gains taxes. In fiscal year 2025, these tax expenditures totaled $95.4 billion.

Moreover, tax expenditures on behalf of homeowners flow mostly to higher-income households. In 2024, for example, over 70% of all mortgage-interest tax deductions went to homeowners earning at least $200,000.

Broadening the availability of rental subsidies would have other benefits. It would save federal, state and local governments billions of dollars in homeless services. Moreover, automatic provision of rental subsidies would reduce the need for additional subsidies to finance new affordable housing. Universal rental assistance, by guaranteeing sufficient rental income, would allow builders to more easily obtain loans to cover development costs.

Of course, sharply raising federal expenditures for low-income rental assistance flies in the face of the Trump administration’s priorities. Its budget proposal for the next fiscal year calls for a 44% cut of more than $27 billion in rental assistance and public housing.

On the other hand, if the government supported rental assistance in amounts commensurate with the tax benefits given to homeowners, it would go a long way toward resolving the rental housing affordability crisis.

Alex Schwartz is Professor of Urban Policy at The New School; Kirk McClure is Professor of Urban Planning at the University of Kansas.

The Conversation arose out of deep-seated concerns for the fading quality of our public discourse and recognition of the vital role that academic experts could play in the public arena. Information has always been essential to democracy. It’s a societal good, like clean water. But many now find it difficult to put their trust in the media and experts who have spent years researching a topic. Instead, they listen to those who have the loudest voices. Those uninformed views are amplified by social media networks that reward those who spark outrage instead of insight or thoughtful discussion. The Conversation seeks to be part of the solution to this problem, to raise up the voices of true experts and to make their knowledge available to everyone. The Conversation publishes nightly at 9 p.m. on FlaglerLive.
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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. JimboXYZ says

    July 8, 2025 at 11:46 pm

    All of this started during the W Bush administration, got worse under Obama, Trump & is where it is at the worst under Biden. Homeowners may be getting subsidies ? With what unaffordable homeowner’s insurance if one isn’t cancelled like the Hurricane & Fires. I figure it’s a matter of time before the insurance companies won’t insure for tornado or floods ? The insurance companies are great at collecting the premiums & raising them, then are nowhere to be found for mortgages that they create defaults on for repossession. Make that criminal and start locking up the over paid goal post movers. And then there’s the local governments that raise taxes. Covid (and I use that as a reason only because nobody really wants to call that out for the post pandemic gouging) that was Bidenomics. Biden-Harris ruined America, there’s should be no doubt in anyone’s minds. I still reflect back to Biden-Harris thinking they were getting 4 more years to “fix” the unaffordable housing crisis they did nothing about. We all like to talk about how elite Ivy League education is. This mess is courtesy of the Ivy League experts that created it. There’s no housing shortage, go check the inventories on Zillow, there are massive listings of properties that are simply unaffordable for list price, taxes & insurance. Real Estate over the last 4 years of Biden-Harris is nothing more than a shell game of what used to be the Buy Here-Pay Here used car lots of past decades for selling repossessed cars in that predatory transportation game. Which also is a Biden thing that has gotten out of control just the same. This world has no shortage. Start giving out rent subsidies, that is only rewarding the rent gouging. Hate on China all anyone wants, but coming out of the pandemic China was the only one’s keeping anything affordable. And then Capitalism started their gouging, those are fellow Americans raising the prices to unafforadable. Even with the tariffs. inflation is lower under Trump than it ever was under Biden. There’s your problem right there. Connect those dots and stop acting like you have no clue who was behind this. Here’s a thought, instead of deporting illegals, how about we lock the Americans that have actually been raping & pillaging the life savings of every generation that is still alive today ? If anyone deserves Alligator Alcatraz, it’s the liars & con artists that have been making the rules for far too long. Sorry, not sorry, someone has to say it. Because nobody else will.

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  2. Jim says

    July 9, 2025 at 11:32 am

    This is one of the most poorly time articles I’ve ever read.
    I guess these guys didn’t hear we have a new administration and the Congress just passed the “Big Beautiful Bill” which is going to succeed in cutting benefits for many people in society who are the most vulnerable. But the rich will get a nice tax benefit so all is good!
    You think the Republicans and Trump are going to pony up this kind of money for housing for the same people being slammed by the BBB?
    Gentlemen, this is just tone deaf and wasteful use of words. I like your sentiment but your train left the station before you even thought to buy a ticket.
    For you next article on improving American lives, I suggest something on education (higher and lower; it’s all under attack), healthcare for the needy, ethics in government, benefits of immigrants, or why transgender and LGTBQ are hardly a threat to the American way of life. All good subjects and all already thrown under the Trump bus. Shoot, throw in an article about the American right to disagree with the government (that might get you deported even if you’re a “real” citizen!).

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  3. Pogo says

    July 10, 2025 at 1:26 pm

    @Alex Schwartz and Kirk McClure

    Of course, you are entirely correct; get in line with all the others urgently in need and long ignored. We’ve so many problems placed ahead of you, e g, the crones clutching their rusty keys (in many places and times) and raising their sons and daughters to a sole purpose: bring “justice” — by any means, and at any cost.

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  4. Atwp says

    July 10, 2025 at 5:06 pm

    Donald Trump will try to slash every program aimed at helping people. Don’t forget his bill for the rich white men. The huge tax breaks for the rich white men and all the social program slashes. What the writer is saying may be true, but Trump isn’t willing to help Negros or other people of color. He act like he just want to help the rich white men, hence the huge tax breaks.

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