| 
						Column: Future U.S. seniors to face housing crunch as 
						wealth declines
		 Send a link to a friend 
		
		 [November 29, 2018]  By 
		Mark Miller 
 CHICAGO (Reuters) - American homes are 
		showing their age - not the houses, but the people living in them.
 
 In 2016, about 55 percent of U.S. households (or about 65 million 
		households) were headed by someone aged 50 or older, according to the 
		Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University (JCHS). That is 
		the highest percentage since the center began keeping records in 1960 
		and likely a historical first for the United States.
 
 In years to come, the housing picture will become even more gray as baby 
		boomers head into their seventies and eighties.
 
 Many will need accessible housing that can accommodate disabilities and 
		mobility challenges - far beyond what can be met by current supply. 
		Perhaps the most striking aspect of this report is that the biggest 
		challenges will be faced by people now in their fifties, because they 
		will enter retirement with lower income and wealth than the current 
		generation of seniors. This group will face a housing crunch marked by a 
		shortage of age-appropriate housing that they can afford to own or rent.
 
		
		 
		
 "We need to address gaps in the affordability and accessibility of our 
		housing stock," said Jennifer Molinsky, lead author of the report. "As 
		the number of households in their 80s grows, it will be essential that 
		we strengthen the links between housing, healthcare, and other 
		services."
 
 Are we prepared to meet these challenges? Not even close.
 
 The report notes that the number of households aged 80 and above jumped 
		71 percent from 1990 to 2016, to 7.5 million. But with the aging of the 
		baby boomers, the number of households in this age group will more than 
		double by 2037. “This is a group that tends to need more services and 
		accessibility features,” Molinsky said. “Do we have enough accessible 
		housing, and enough services that can be brought into homes? The short 
		answer is - no.”
 
 The JCHS report tells a tale of two groups of older Americans: those who 
		are retired now, and those who will retire in the future. In households 
		headed by retired people, income has grown significantly in recent 
		years. For example, median annual income rose 9.6 percent from 2011 to 
		2016 for households aged 65-79 (to $44,100). During the same period, 
		income gains for working-age households in their 50s to mid-60s rose 
		just 2.6 percent to a median of $66,500 - a number that in real terms is 
		still behind where it was in 2010 during the depths of the Great 
		Recession.
 
 LESS WEALTH-BUILDING
 
 Home ownership rates among younger households have fallen sharply since 
		the Great Recession, JCHS reports. A large majority of older households 
		(79 percent) aged 65 and over owned their homes in 2017. But the 
		ownership rate for younger households headed toward retirement has 
		declined steadily since 2004, and especially since the Great Recession. 
		For example, among households aged 50-64, some 74 percent owned a home 
		in 2017, off sharply from 79 percent in 2007.
 
		
            [to top of second column] | 
            
			 
            
			Elderly people sit on a park bench after sun set in Encinitas, 
			California, U.S., July 5, 2017. REUTERS/Mike Blake 
            
			 
This trend is worrisome for several reasons. First, it means that fewer of these 
younger households are participating in the wealth-building typically associated 
with home ownership. And fewer will be able to tap home equity as a backstop in 
retirement to fund large expenses such as long-term care. Finally, it means more 
people will be exposed to the volatility of rental rates. 
The JCHS report notes that a rising number of older Americans are 
"cost-burdened" when it comes to housing, meaning they are spending more than 30 
percent of income on housing. In 2016, 9.7 million households were 
cost-burdened, and another 4.9 million were “severely burdened,” meaning they 
paid at least half of their income for housing.
 Homelessness among older adults is rising. Research in this area is limited, but 
data from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) points to a 
48 percent increase in “sheltered homelessness” among adults aged 62 or older 
from 2007 to 2017. (The term "sheltered" refers to people staying in emergency 
shelters or transitional housing programs.) And the JCHS report notes that 
homelessness in New York City among adults aged 65 and above nearly doubled from 
2011 to 2015.
 
Meanwhile, federal funding for housing that is affordable for low-income 
households all but disappeared during this decade. Congress allocated $5 million 
in fiscal 2017 for the HUD Section 202 Housing for the Elderly program, which 
focuses on providing housing to very low income seniors - the first funding 
since fiscal 2011. Congress provided $105 million in fiscal 2018. Meanwhile, 
JCHS notes that many older adults live in low-density areas and in single-family 
homes, and can become isolated when they stop driving; this will create 
pressures in the years ahead on communities to provide new housing and 
transportation options. 
 
"We’ve seen all these things coming but the numbers are staggering," said Linda 
Couch, vice president of housing policy at LeadingAge, an association that 
represents aging-services agencies. "We have a major issue here with people in 
their fifties and sixties - they will have a hard time affording not only 
housing but healthcare,” she said. “And they will be 70 and 80 before we know 
it.”
 (The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.)
 
 (Reporting and writing by Mark Miller in Chicago; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
 
				 
			[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.  
			Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |